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Computer Ethics and Philosophical Enquiry

Well-Being, Flourishing and ICTs

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Published on Wednesday, November 27, 2013

Abstract

CEPE (Computer Ethics and Philosophical Enquiry) is a major conference in the field of computer/information ethics. It will be held, for the first time, in Paris, France, on the Cordeliers Campus, June 23-25 2013. Previous CEPE conferences themes include intercultural ethics, roboethics, social impacts of social computing, socio-technical and ethical change in ICTs, and social responsibility and ICTs. CEPE 2014 will be hosted by CERNA (Commission de réflexion sur l’Ethique de la Recherche en sciences et technologies du Numérique d’Allistene). As well, the last day of the conference (Wednesday, June 25) is co-sponsored by ACM SIGCAS (Special Interest Group, Computers and Society), and will focus on gender and technology.

Announcement

Presentation

Ethicomp and CEPE are major conferences in the field of computer/information ethics. Previous CEPE conferences themes include intercultural ethics, roboethics, social impacts of social computing, socio-technical and ethical change in ICTs, and social responsibility and ICTs. ETHICOMP, the conference series initiated in 1995 by Simon Rogerson and Terry Bynum, has likewise focused on the ethical dimensions of computing technologies. To support the missions of each entity, while providing a robust opportunity for innovative collaborative research and scholarship, Ethicomp and CEPE will partner in 2014.

Our joint conferences will be hosted by CERNA (Commission de réflexion sur l’Ethique de la Recherche en sciences et technologies du Numérique d’Allistene).

As well, the overlap day between the two conferences (Wednesday, June 25) is co-sponsored by ACM SIGCAS (Special Interest Group, Computers and Society), and will focus on gender and technology.

Background

Norbert Wiener’s The Human Use of Human Beings: Cybernetics and Society (1950) is a primary source for contemporary Information and Computing Ethics. Wiener framed his reflections on the possible uses and benefits of then newly emerging computational devices and networks within the key ethical norms of human well-being and flourishing – the core norms of virtue ethics. Contemporary computers and computer networks increasingly pervade and shape our lives, dramatically enhancing our communication capacities: they thereby foreground and amplify “the networked self,” i.e., our sense of selfhood, identity, and agency (including moral agency) as increasingly relational and interwoven with one another.  Such relational senses of identity, selfhood and agency are in fact the beginning point of virtue ethics in its diverse expressions and traditions globally.  Wiener’s foundational framework has thus proven to be profoundly prescient.

But certainly, there are multiple ethical frameworks within which questions of “the good life” – as focusing on our well-being and flourishing as human beings – may be couched. At the same time, alongside the undeniable boons of ICTs – recent developments such as the NSA surveillance scandals make critical reflection on the ethical, social, and political dimensions of contemporary ICTs and their array of uses all the more urgent.

Accordingly, for CEPE’14 we invite submissions – including panels – that address these core concerns with well-being and flourishing in an age of ICTs. We encourage research and reflection that approach these thematics from a wide array of viewpoints and with attention to specific foci including:

  • ICTs and development
  • technosecurity and cyber-warfare
  • robots and robot ethics for humans and humane lives;
  • social computing
  • global / cultural perspectives on ICTs and the good life

Important Dates

  • 30 November 2013 – Latest date to submit abstracts to Easychair
  • 25 January 2014 – Authors informed of programme committee decisions by this date
  • 5 April 2014 – Last date for receipt of full papers from authors (electronic version)

Panels

Submission due: December 15th, 2013

Selection: February 15th, 2014

Submission guidelines

Submissions will be accepted via Easychair: https://www.easychair.org/conferences/submission_new.cgi?a=5138535

Scientific Responsability

  • Elizabeth Buchanan (University of Wisconsin-Stout, US), Executive Director, INSEIT
  • Charles Ess (University of Oslo), Conference Chair; President, INSEIT
  • Shalini Kesar (Southern Utah University, US), Program Chair
  • Bernd Carsten Stahl (De Montfort University), Chair, ETHICOMP Steering Committee
  • Jean-Gabriel Ganascia (University Pierre et Marie Curie - Sorbonne Universités)
  • Max Dauchet (LIFL - Laboratoire d'Informatique Fondamentale de Lille)

Places

  • Campus des Cordeliers - 15, rue de l'école de médecine
    Paris, France (75006)

Date(s)

  • Saturday, November 30, 2013
  • Sunday, December 15, 2013

Attached files

Keywords

  • ethique, sciences et technologies de l'information et de la communication, philosophie, roboéthique, cybersécurité

Contact(s)

  • Jean-Gabriel Ganascia
    courriel : Jean-Gabriel [dot] Ganascia [at] lip6 [dot] fr
  • Max Dauchet
    courriel : max [dot] dauchet [at] inria [dot] fr

Information source

  • Jean-Gabriel Ganascia
    courriel : Jean-Gabriel [dot] Ganascia [at] lip6 [dot] fr

License

CC0-1.0 This announcement is licensed under the terms of Creative Commons CC0 1.0 Universal.

To cite this announcement

« Computer Ethics and Philosophical Enquiry », Call for papers, Calenda, Published on Wednesday, November 27, 2013, https://doi.org/10.58079/ooy

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