1st Edition

Media Challenges to Digital Flourishing

Edited By Sandra Borden Copyright 2025
    116 Pages
    by Routledge

    This book engages broadly with the impacts of media practices on our prospects for thriving as moral beings in today’s digital spaces. It brings together senior and junior scholars in communication and philosophy originally convened for a symposium on the theme of Media Challenges to Digital Flourishing. Using perspectives ranging from virtue ethics and media sociology to care ethics and moral psychology, the authors anticipate and analyze cutting-edge ethical issues at the nexus of media and technology.

    Topics covered include the moral standing of artificial intelligence, the characteristics of virtues and moral exemplars in digital spaces, the prospects for moral autonomy under the terms of surveillance capitalism, and the obligation of media ethicists to proactively flag emerging ethical problems. In short, this book attempts to identify and address the impacts of digital media practices on our prospects for thriving as moral beings in terms of both the virtuous and the virtual.

    This interdisciplinary volume is a helpful resource for students and scholars of media, communication, journalism, technology, moral psychology and ethics, as well as practitioners and policy makers with related interests. It was originally published as a special issue of the Journal of Media Ethics.

    Introduction
    Sandra L. Borden

    1. Duty Now and for the Future: Communication, Ethics and Artificial Intelligence
    David J. Gunkel


    2. Civil Deliberation Unpacked: An Empirical Investigation
    Michel Croce, Filippo Domaneschi and Maria Silvia Vaccarezza


    3. Virtual Virtue? Opportunities and Challenges in Explicating Intellectual Virtues
    Through Journalistic Exemplars in the Digital Network
    David A. Craig and Casey Yetter


    4. Reclaiming Media: Answering Surveillance Capitalists with Care-Based Democracy
    Joseph Jones


    5. The Problem with Apu: Recognizing Moral Issues in Media Ethics
    Bastiaan Vanacker


    6. Autonomy in Local Digital News: An Exploration of Organizational and Moral Psychology Factors
    Rhema Zlaten

     

     

    Biography

    Sandra L. Borden is professor of communication and director of the Center for the Study of Ethics in Society at Western Michigan University. Her books include the award-winning Journalism as Practice: MacIntyre, Virtue Ethics and the Press (2007, Ashgate; 2009, Routledge) and The Routledge Companion to Media and Poverty (2022).