Home / Humanities / Philosophy / A Philosopher Looks at Digital Communication

A Philosopher Looks at Digital Communication

AUTHOR
Price
€12.20
€13.60 -10%
Upon request
Dispatched within 15 - 25 days.

Add to wishlist

Communication is complicated, and so is the ethics of communication. We communicate about innumerable topics, to varied audiences, using a gamut of technologies. The ethics of communication, therefore, has to address a wide range of technical, ethical and epistemic requirements. In this book, Onora O'Neill shows how digital technologies have made communication more demanding: they can support communication with huge numbers of distant and dispersed recipients; they can amplify or suppress selected content; and they can target or ignore selected audiences. Often this is done anonymously, making it harder for readers and listeners, viewers and browsers, to assess which claims are true or false, reliable or misleading, flaky or fake. So how can we empower users to assess and evaluate digital communication, so that they can tell which standards it meets and which it flouts? That is the challenge which this book explores.

  •  
  • Argues that the ethics of communication needs to focus on listeners, readers, browsers and audiences as well as originators
  • Explores how past changes in communication technologies can shed light on the challenges that digital technologies have created for communication
  • Locates the role of rights to communicate – especially freedom of expression and the right to privacy – in a wider context that sees communication as connecting originators to recipients
Author: O'Neill Onora
Publisher: CAMBRIDGE UNIVERSITY PRESS
Pages: 150
ISBN: 9781108986816
Cover: Paperback
Edition Number: 1
Release Year: 2022

Part I. Complex Communication:
1. Presuppositions of Communication
2. Acts and Content, Norms and Harms
3. Communication and New Technologies
4. Digital Hopes
Part II. Norms and Standards in a Connected World:
5. Duties and Rights 1: Freedom of Expression
6. Duties and Rights 2: Rights to Privacy
Part III. Politics and Connectivity:
7. Power and Anonymity.

Onora O'Neill is Honorary Professor Emeritus at the University of Cambridge and a crossbench member of the House of Lords. She is the author of numerous books on Kant, ethics and political philosophy, including Justice Across Boundaries (Cambridge University Press, 2016).

You may also like

Newsletter

Subscribe to the newsletter to be the first to receive our new releases and offers
Your account Your wishlist