Communications - Scientific Letters of the University of Zilina 2018, 20(11):38-44 | DOI: 10.26552/com.C.2018.1A.38-44

C. S. Lewis and the Challenge of Ethics in Digital Society

Tibor Mahrik1, Mark Neal2
1 Department of General and Applied Ethics, Faculty of Arts, Constantine the Philosopher University in Nitra, Slovakia
2 Armagard Ltd Company and C.S. Lewis, Chicago, Illinois, USA

This paper examines the idea that digital societies lack an ethical framework for understanding and mitigating the impact of digital technologies on human flourishing and the consequent diminishing of human agency. The authors examine how selected works of C.S. Lewis address man's moral responsibility while living in a developing society and call for a grounding in metaethical frameworks prior to any outcomes of applied ethics. Each of the authors contributes from his own field of expertise - Mahrik on nanoethics and Neal on digital media - while Lewis' writing corpus is the shared interest as well as the basis for their research. Writing and thinking from within a metaethical framework he terms the Tao, or natural law, Lewis offers an approach to the dehumanization of digital culture through his own approach to one of the oldest technologies: that of language. This offers the beginning of an infrastructure for thinking about and reacting to digital society in an ethical manner.

Keywords: C. S. Lewis; language; nanoethics; metaethics; digital society; responsibility; human dignity; dehumanization; natural law

Published: May 31, 2018  Show citation

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Mahrik, T., & Neal, M. (2018). C. S. Lewis and the Challenge of Ethics in Digital Society. Communications - Scientific Letters of the University of Zilina20(1A), 38-44. doi: 10.26552/com.C.2018.1A.38-44
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