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Ethical challenges to citizens of ‘The automatic Age’: Norbert Wiener on the information society

Terrell Ward Bynum (Research Center on Computing & Society, Southern Connecticut State University, New Haven, USA)

Journal of Information, Communication and Ethics in Society

ISSN: 1477-996X

Article publication date: 31 May 2004

488

Abstract

This article discusses the foresight of philosopher/mathematician Norbert Wiener who, in the 1940s, founded Information Ethics as a research discipline. Wiener envisioned the coming of an “automatic age” in which information technology would have profound social and ethical impacts upon the world. He predicted, for example, machines that will learn, reason and play games; “automatic factories” that will replace assembly‐line workers and middle managers with computerized devices; workers who will perform their jobs over great distances with the aid of new communication technologies; and people who will gain remarkable powers by adding computerized “prostheses” to their bodies. To analyze the ethical implications of such developments, Wiener presented some principles of justice and employed a powerful practical method of ethical analysis.

Keywords

Citation

Ward Bynum, T. (2004), "Ethical challenges to citizens of ‘The automatic Age’: Norbert Wiener on the information society", Journal of Information, Communication and Ethics in Society, Vol. 2 No. 2, pp. 65-74. https://doi.org/10.1108/14779960480000243

Publisher

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Emerald Group Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2004, Emerald Group Publishing Limited

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