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El. knyga: Christian Ethics for a Digital Society

3.21/5 (23 ratings by Goodreads)
  • Formatas: PDF+DRM
  • Išleidimo metai: 15-Dec-2018
  • Leidėjas: Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
  • Kalba: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781442267381
  • Formatas: PDF+DRM
  • Išleidimo metai: 15-Dec-2018
  • Leidėjas: Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
  • Kalba: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781442267381

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Christian Ethics for a Digital Society looks at how we live in an increasingly digital world. From sexting to hashtag activism like the #metoo movement, technology has entered both our private and public lives in a deep way. Far from hand-wringing about the dangers of technology, Christian Ethics for a Digital Society offers pragmatic wisdom on how to live thoughtfully today. Instead of just worrying about the next technological gadget or app, its time we consider what Christianity has to offer a world increasingly reimagined in a digital landscape. This book provides a new perspective on how to assess digital technology use, development, and expansion through a lens of Christian values. The purpose of this book is to begin a conversation about the massive ecosystem change that digital technologies push in our lives through a focus on the ethics of everyday practices.

Recenzijos

[ Kate Ott] argues cogently that for Christians to practice ethical internet use, they must be digitally literate. For Ott, this means understanding 'how data is used, information is created, and predictive analytics are promoted.' . . . Ott implores Christians to use technology in ways that honor God, including practicing forgiveness, being socially responsible, and caring for the environment with their technological choices. Otts book will appeal to Christian technology enthusiasts looking to engage in digital communities. * Publishers Weekly * Finally, a book about tech that treats Christians like real human beings. Kate Ott offers a sophisticated, critical, accessible primer on Internet cultures and their discontents. It is not another call for a prudish retreat from networks, nor a ploy to manipulate them for propagandistic ends. Rather, it invites faith to be a guide for creative and savvy participation in building a more just digital world. -- Nathan Schneider, University of Colorado Boulder So many theological responses to the digital age begin (and end) in moral hand-wringing about how much our world has changed, or in how-tos designed to enable more tech-savvy ministers and lay leaders. Kate Ott offers us something else: a kind of moral grammaror in her language, practices of moral hackingto navigate our digital lives in embodied, incarnational ways. An improvisational book in the best of senses, this should be read by teachers, professors, students, parents, ministers, and anyone trying to think and act Christianly. -- Kathryn Reklis, Fordham University What difference does it make to engage digital technology as a Christian? Kate Ott invites us to think intentionally and creatively about the shaping effect our engagement with the ever-changing digital world has on our relationships and our community formation. Providing a new ethical language, she orients our reflection away from a rule-based approach toward a relational and imaginative approach, all while keeping context, community, and justice at the fore. -- Xochitl Alvizo, California State University, Northridge

Preface vii
Introduction 1(16)
Christian Ethics as Creative Moral Response
3(5)
Digital Literacies as Praxis
8(2)
Moral Approaches and Digital Technologies
10(3)
"We" and Moral Proportion
13(2)
Moral Means
15(2)
1 Programming for Difference
17(26)
Babel: Valuing Diversity
20(4)
Data, Algorithms, and Predictive Analytics
24(12)
Searching Difference, Networking Diversity
36(5)
Excursus 1: Difference and Self-Understanding
41(2)
2 Networked Selves
43(30)
Moral Formation in a Digital Life
46(3)
Are We Disconnected in Our Connection?
49(2)
Digitally Creating the Self
51(7)
The Self as Digital, or I Share, and Therefore I Am
58(5)
Attunement and Digital Moral Formation
63(7)
Excursus 2: Moral Complicity in the Digital Society
70(3)
3 Moral Functions Beyond the Delete Key
73(28)
Sin and Metanoia in a Digital Age
75(3)
Digital Data, Archiving, and Surveillance
78(8)
Ctrl+Z: To Forget or to Forgive?
86(4)
Moral Functions of Forgiveness and Metanoia
90(4)
Digital Disruption
94(4)
Excursus 3: God as Panopticon or Prisoner
98(3)
4 Creation Connectivity
101(24)
Linking Ecological, Technological, and Social Issues
103(5)
Data Mining and Digital Mattering
108(6)
Reconnecting with Cocreative Responsibility
114(9)
Excursus 4: Digital Clouds and Dirt-Filled Devices
123(2)
5 Ethical Hacking and Hacking Ethics
125(22)
Swords into Plowshares
126(5)
Digital Literacies for Hacking
131(4)
Participatory Culture and Digital Citizenship
135(2)
Creativity, Hacking, and Community
137(4)
Conclusion
141(4)
Excursus 5: Reading and Writing New Visions
145(2)
Notes 147(24)
Selected Bibliography 171(2)
Web Citations 173(2)
Index 175
Kate Ott is associate professor of Christian social ethics at Drew Theological School.She also held the position of deputy director of the Religious Institute, a nonprofit committed to sexual health, education, and justice in faith communities and society. She is author or co-editor of several books, including Sex + Faith: Talking with Your Child from Birth to Adolescence. She has leadership roles with organizations including Catholics for Choice and Feminist Studies in Religion.