Is computer technology morally neutral?

Thursday, November 29th, 2007 | Opinion

“Guns don’t kill people, people kill people.” This phrase has been uttered by those supporting the right to own guns as a way to quickly summarize the argument that it is not the gun, by itself, which causes harm, but instead it is the person using it. They see guns as morally neutral. Those arguing the other side, in favor of more restrictions on gun ownership, point out that a gun makes it much easier for someone to do something morally problematic; someone who only would have punched someone is now capable of killing them with less effort. Both sides have a point, and they are both correct: guns don’t kill people by themselves and guns do make it easier for someone to kill someone. This argument has been going on for years and I am not going to solve it here. But I am going to add a twist…

In my MIS class a couple weeks ago we were discussing the question: “Is computer technology morally neutral?” This is something I really had never considered before. Isn’t the computer just a tool, like a hammer or a notebook or a calculator? In researching this further, I came upon this quote (taken from religion-online.org):

Our technology is a tool, yes, but all tools allow the user to do certain things and not others. The tool, in a sense, encourages the user to undertake some tasks and exclude others. Some people have bought the notion that our tools are morally neutral; they argue, for example, that the hydrogen bomb is neither “good” nor “bad.” It is rather a tool which we put to either good or bad use.

- J. David Bolter

In thinking about this further, I can start to see how computer technology could be considered morally problematic. For instance, take hypothetical person “Rob”. Rob likes music, but he would never go into a music store, put a few CD’s in a bag, and then walk out of the store without paying. But then Rob was introduced to file sharing over the Internet. It was so easy, and he wasn’t hurting anyone, so he started downloading just the songs he really wanted. Or take Rick, a Christian young man trying to walk the straight and narrow. Rick would never think of buying a Playboy magazine or renting an adult video. But then he got his computer…

It gives one pause…on the one hand, it is still the responsibility of the sinner and we will be held accountable. Yet on the other hand, the existence of the computer was what enabled the sin to take place…

What do you think? Is computer technology morally neutral?

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3 Comments to Is computer technology morally neutral?

[...] and Technology and Technology Tags: DVR, morality, Technology, TiVO Recently, I questioned whether technology was really morally neutral. For much of my life I have seen technology as a tool [...]

[...] it uncritically (chapter 3). From the third chapter, Matt Anderson echoes one of the themes I have discussed before on this [...]

Corrine
November 17, 2009

I think the computer is morally neutral, but it is a tool created by immoral humans beings so it can and will be used for evil. There is only so much we can do to stop this, and I certainly don’t think it would be fair to eliminate it or severely restrict it’s use for everyone simply because people will use it for evil. However I think just like guns there should be some restrictions on the computer’s use. Although at this point I am not sure what those could be because its hard to determine what is intruding on a persons privacy and who can be held accountable for certain activities. Should Rick be traced down and held accountable for viewing porn? Or should the website supplying the porn be responsible? Its really tricky to narrow it down to a black and white issue, but I think it’s a good discussion.

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