Printer-friendly versionsession details: Is Drupal Moral?
David Weinburger, co-author of the Cluetrain Manifesto and Everything Is Miscellaneous: The Power of the New Digital Disorder
- Why even ask? Because Drupal is used in high-visibility places (Howard Dean, Recovery.gov)
- Can technology be moral instead of amoral?
- can only moral agents be moral?
- do some things inherently suck, like nuclear bombs?
- context can help us assign morality to amoral things
- hyperlinks are the new punctuation, telling us how to continue reading instead of when to stop reading
- in the past, knowledge has conveniently, seemingly naturally divided itself into book-sized units
- Britannica has 180,000 words on "philosophy," Wikipedia has 9,000 (longer than guidelines suggest it should be)
- but Wikipedia article has links to related articles -- if you count them Wikipedia has much more
- Wikipedia's shape is closer to the shape of truth than Britannica's
- traditional databases organize information by reducing information, cramming selected bits in boxes and leaving out everything else
- by linking out (to other sites), we allow each entry to take its own shape while still being organized
- moral principles vs. consequences
- principles are top-down: make the current situation fit a pre-defined criterion
- but even if people agree on the principle, they may not agree on how the situation fits! (ex: murder is wrong, but is abortion?)
- utilitarian approach: judge the unique situation by whether its consequences are more good or bad
- but anyone can think of a hypothetical case where any situation has good or bad consequences
- moral intuitionism: trust our guts
- but some people have really rotten guts
- for the most part, people are sympathetic creatures and make moral decisions intuitively
- when sympathy turns toward the world it becomes care
- back to Drupal
- as a technology, Drupal lets us connect as people and care about each other
- Drupal, the Web, and morality share a single architecture
- but it doesn't happen by itself
- contrasting view: Web allows similar people to cluster together and close their minds
- but is the traditional newspaper any more diverse than Web sites? are most conversations?
- small talk allows us to find a common topic where we mostly agree; then we converse about that
- surprisingly, this fundamental question (does the Web make us more or less diverse) doesn't matter
- we all learn from the Internet that the world is way more interesting and diverse than we thought
- The exciting conclusion
- yes, Drupal is moral! But that doesn't tell us enough.
- regardless of the architecture, we must perpetually fight against our baser nature
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