Ethics of Socially Disruptive Technologies

Interviews with, and by, scholars affiliated with the research consortium Ethics of Socially Disruptive Technologies (ESDiT, 2020-2029). The ESDiT podcast showcases ongoing research of various junior and senior scholars active in contemporary technology ethics. www.esdit.nl

Guido Löhr on "Do socially disruptive technologies really change our concepts or just our conceptions?"

Guido Löhr is a postdoctoral researcher at Technical University Eindhoven. Their research focuses on the notions like meaning, concept, and commitment and their roles in neuroscience, psychology, philosophy, and linguistics. The past two years they have also been working on philosophy of technology and AI.  In this episode, Bouke van Balen speaks with Guido about conceptual disruption. The backbone of their discussion is a recent paper from Guido titles "Do socially disruptive technologies really change our concepts or just our conceptions?" You can find it here 

02-06
33:33

Sven Nyholm on "A new control problem? Humanoid robots, artificial intelligence, and the value of control"

Sven Nyholm is an associate professor at the Ethics Institute of Utrecht University. His main areas of research are applied ethics (especially the ethics of technology), ethical theory, and the history of ethics. Nyholm’s research covers a wide range of topics in ethics, including well-being and meaning in life, the philosophy of love and sex, agency and moral responsibility, the concept of the self, and the ethics of human-robot interaction.  In this episode, Bouke van Balen interviews Sven on the topic of robot-ethics. The backbone of their discussion is a paper Sven recently published: "A new control problem? Humanoid robots, artificial intelligence, and the value of control." You can find it here. 

01-16
48:50

Sabine Roeser on "Technological Risk, Emotions and Art"

Sabine Roeser is Professor of Ethics at TU Delft. Jeroen Hopster interviews her about "Technological Risk, Emotions and Art". To know more: Sabine Roeser, Behnam Taebi & Neelke Doorn (2020) Geoengineering the climate and ethical challenges: what we can learn from moral emotions and art, Critical Review of International Social and Political Philosophy, 23:5, 641-658, DOI: 10.1080/13698230.2020.1694225  and Sabine Roeser. 2017. Risk, Technology, and Moral Emotions. Routledge.  https://www.bol.com/nl/nl/p/risk-technology-and-moral-emotions/9200000082164967

07-04
35:52

Dina Babushkina on "Disruption, technology and the question of (artificial) identity"​

Dina Babushkina  is an assistant professor in philosophy of technology & society at University of Twente. Cindy Friedman interviews her about her paper "Disruption, technology and the question of (artificial) identity"​ DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s43681-021-00110-y

06-27
24:59

Ben Hofbauer on "Geo-engineering & techno-moral change"

Ben Hofbauer is a PhD Candidate at University of Delft. Kristy Claassen interviews him about his research on Geo-engineer and techno-moral change

06-20
40:27

Behnam Taebi on “Climate Risk and Normative Uncertainties”

Behnam Taebi is Professor of Energy & Climate Ethics at Delft University of Technology. Jeroen Hopster interviews him about his co-authored article “Governing climate risks in the face of normative uncertainties”, which has been published in WIREs Climate Change (2020). https://doi.org/10.1002/wcc.666

03-28
29:04

Matthew Dennis on "digital wellbeing"

Matthew Dennis is postdoctoral researcher at Eindhoven Technical University. Sven Nyholm interviews him about his recent article 'Towards a Theory of Digital Well‑Being: Reimagining Online', published in Science and Engineering Ethics.

01-16
33:44

Patricia Reyes on "Climate Technoactivism"

Patricia Reyes is PhD fellow at the University of Twente. Ben Hofbauer interviews her about a political philosophy for climate technoactivism. https://people.utwente.nl/p.d.reyes

11-10
25:34

Emily Sullivan on "Social Epistemic Networks"

Emily Sullivan is Assistant Professor at Eindhoven Technical University. Jeroen Hopster interviews her about online epistemic vulnerability, on which she recently co-authored the article "Vulnerability in Social Epistemic Networks". https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/09672559.2020.1782562 https://research.tue.nl/en/persons/emily-sullivan

11-03
25:32

Bernice Bovenkerk on "Ethics of Animal Modification"

Bernice Bovenkerk is associate professor at Wageningen University. In this episode Jeroen Hopster interviews her about arguments regarding animal modification, discussing her article "Ethical perspectives on modifying animals: beyond welfare arguments". https://bernicebovenkerk.wordpress.com/ https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6952862/

11-01
30:41

Cindy Friedman on "Social Robots"

Cindy Friedman is PhD-researcher at Utrecht University. In this episode Sven Nyholm interviews her about the ethics of social robots, discussing her paper: “Human-Robot Moral Relations: Human Interactants as Moral Patients of Their Own Agential Moral Actions Towards Robots” https://www.springerprofessional.de/en/human-robot-moral-relations-human-interactants-as-moral-patients/18702584

11-01
28:08

Naomi Jacobs on "Capability Sensitive Design"

Naomi Jacobs is assistant professor in bioethics at the University of Twente. In this episode Sven Nyholm interviews her about a key topic of her doctoral research: capability sensitive design.  https://people.utwente.nl/n.jacobs https://pure.tue.nl/ws/portalfiles/portal/183192842/20210929_Jacobs_hf.pdf

11-01
37:18

Julia Hermann on "The Artificial Womb"

Julia Hermann is assistant professor at the University of Twente and researcher in the ESDiT programme. Her current research fouses on biomedical ethics, specifically on ethical issues raised by the artificial womb. In this episode Jeroen Hopster interviews her about the ethics of the artificial womb and the disruptions it provokes.  https://people.utwente.nl/j.s.hermann

10-29
22:43

Jeroen Hopster on "The Nature of Socially Disruptive Technologies"

Jeroen Hopster is postdoctoral researcher at Twente University and member of ESDiT. In October 2021 he published the paper "The nature of socially disruptive technologies" in Technology in Society. In this episode Julia Hermann interviews him about his research on technosocial disruption.  https://people.utwente.nl/j.k.g.hopster https://doi.org/10.1016/j.techsoc.2021.101750 

10-29
25:37

Ben Hofbauer on "Governing Prometheus: Ethical Reflections On Risk & Uncertainty In Solar Climate Engineering Research"

In this episode, Jeroen Hopster speaks with Ben Hofbauer about his dissertation.

11-25
27:07

Caroline Bollen on "Empathy 2.0. What it means to be empathetic in a diverse and digital world"

Caroline Bollen is a Postdoc at Technical University of Eindhoven, and she was a PhD candidate at Delft University of Technology (Ethics & Philosophy of Technology). She has an interdisciplinary background in medical biology, neuroscience, and science in society. In this episode, she is interviewed by Bouke van Balen about her PhD project, that centred around the question: what does it mean to be empathetic in a diverse and digital world? Check out the papers that she published as part of her dissertation: A reflective guide on the meaning of empathy in autism research, published in Methods in Psychology, 2023 Towards a Clear and Fair Conceptualization of Empathy, published in Social Epistemology, 2023 A Conceptual and Ethical framework for Empathy and Communication Technologies, published in Technology and Society, 2023

11-10
45:00

Janna van Grunsven on "Moral Visibility and Technology"

Janna van Grunsven is assistant professor in TU Delft’s ethics and philosophy of technology section. With the support of a Veni personal grant from the Dutch Research Council, she conducts research at the intersection of embodied cognition, philosophy and ethics of technology, and disability studies. In this episode, she is interviewed by Bouke van Balen about moral visibility and technology. Check out these papers if you want to read more about Janna's work: Enactivism and the Paradox of Moral Perception. Published in Topoi, 2021. Technosocial disruption, enactivism, & social media: On the overlooked risks of teenage cancel culture. Published in Technology in Society, 2024. Disabled Body-Minds in Hostile Environments: Disrupting our Cartesian Sociotechnical Imagination with Enactive Embodied Cognition and Critical Disability Studies. Published in Topoi, 2024.

11-04
59:08

Alessio Gerola on "The Ethics and Philosophy of Biomimicry"

Alessio Gerola is a doctoral researcher at Wageningen University. His research is about the ethical and philosophical implications of biomimicry. In this episode, Patricia Reyes interviews Alessio about his work. If you want to know more, you can find a paper of Alessio here.

09-15
35:54

Adam Henschke on "When Enhancements need Therapy"

Recent enhancements such as brain stimulation technologies pose new possibilities to enhance soldiers. But what happens when these “enhanced” soldiers need therapy?  Our guest for this episode is Dr. Adam Henschke from the University of Twente. In this episode, we discuss Dr. Henschke’s article “When Enhancements need Therapy: Disenhancements, Iatrogenesis, and the Responsibility of Military Institutions”. The article can be found here: https://doi.org/10.1007/s40592-022-00169-1 We also refer to the article “Can a Soldier Say No to an Enhancing Intervention?” co-written by Adam and Sahar Latheef. This article can be found at https://doi.org/10.3390/philosophies5030013 We hope that you enjoy the episode!

06-23
41:33

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