i 'm not able to tell you what is moral or immoral because we 're living in a pluralist society my values can be radically different from your values which means that what i consider moral or immoral based on that might not
necessarily be what you consider moral or immoral
but i also realized that there is one thing that i could give you and that is what this guy behind me gave the world
socrates it is questions what i can do and what i would like to do with you is give you like that
initial question a set of questions to figure out for yourself layer by layer
like peeling an onion getting at the core of what you believe is moral or immoral
persuasion and i 'd like to do that with a couple of examples of technologies where people have used game elements to get people to do things
so
effective that they motivate people to engage in unsafe driving behaviors like not stopping on a red headlight because that way you have to stop and restart the engine and that would use
quite some fuel wouldn 't it so
despite this being a very well intended
applicationobviously there was a side effect of that and here 's another example for one of these side effects commendable
a site that allows parents to give their kids little badges for doing the things that parents want their kids to do like tying their shoes and at first that sounds very nice very benign well intended
but it turns out if you look into
research on people 's mindset
that caring about outcomes caring about public
recognition caring about these kinds of public tokens of
recognition is not
necessarily very helpful for your long term
psychological well being it 's better if you care about
learning something it 's better when you care about yourself than how you appear in front of other people
so that kind of motivational tool that is used
actually in and of itself
so that 's a second very
obvious question what are the effects of what you 're doing the effects that you 're having with the
device like less fuel
as well as the effects of the
actual tools you 're using to get people to do things public recognition
now is that all
intention effect
well there are some technologies which
obviouslycombine both
and i think most of us will agree well that 's something well intended and also has good consequences in the words of michel foucault it is a technology of the self it is a technology that empowers the individual to determine its own life course to shape itself
but the problem is as foucault points out that every technology of the self has a technology of
domination as its flip side as you see in today 's modern
liberal democracies
the society the state not only allows us to determine our self to shape our self it also demands it of us
it demands that we optimize ourselves that we control ourselves that we self manage
continuously because that 's the only way in which such a
liberal society works these technologies want us to stay in the game that society has devised for us
they want us to fit in even better they want us to optimize ourselves to fit in
even something we consider as well intended and as good in its effects like stutzman 's freedom comes with certain values embedded in it
and we can question these values we can question is it a good thing that all of us
continuously self optimize ourselves to fit better into that society or to give you another example what about a piece of
persuasive technology that
convinces muslim women to wear their headscarves is that a good or a bad technology in its intentions or in its effects well that basically depends on the kind of values that you bring to bear to make these kinds of judgments so that 's
a third question what values do you use to judge and
speaking of values i 've noticed that in the
discussion about moral
persuasion online and when i 'm talking with people more often than not there is a weird bias
and that bias is that we 're asking is this or that still ethical is it still permissible
we 're asking things like is this oxfam donation form where the regular
monthly donation is the preset default and people maybe without intending it are that way encouraged or nudged into giving a regular donation instead of a one time donation is that still permissible is it still ethical we 're
fishing at the low end
but in fact that question is it still ethical is just one way of looking at
ethics because if you look at the
beginning of
ethics in
and he put that in the word arete which we from the ancient greek
translate as
virtue but really it means
excellence it means living up to your own full
potential as a human being
and that is an idea that i think that paul richard buchanan
nicely put in a recent essay where he said products are vivid arguments about how we should live our lives our designs are not ethical or unethical in that they 're using ethical or unethical means of persuading us
they have a moral
component just in the kind of
vision and the
aspiration of the good life that they present to us
and if you look into the designed
environment around us with that kind of lens asking what is the
vision of the good life that our products our design present to us
then you often get the shivers because of how little we expect of each other of how little we
actually seem to expect of our life and what the good life looks like
and
speaking of design you notice that i already broadened the discussion
i don 't know whether you know the great
communication researcher paul watzlawick who back in the sixty s made the
argument we cannot not
communicate even if we choose to be silent we chose to be silent we 're communicating something by choosing to be silent
and in the same way that we cannot not
communicate we cannot not
persuadewhatever we do or
refrain from doing
whatever we put out there as a piece of design into the world
which is what peter paul verbeek the dutch
philosopher of technology says no matter whether we as designers intend it or not we materialize
morality we make certain things harder and easier to do we
organize the
existence of
people we put a certain
vision of what good or bad or
normal or usual is in front of people by everything we put out there in the world
even something as innocuous
as a set of school chairs is a
persuasive technology
because it presents and materializes a certain
vision of the good life the good life in which teaching and
learning and listening is about one person teaching the others listening in which it is about
learning is done while sitting
in which you learn for yourself in which you 're not
supposed to change these rules because the chairs are fixed to the ground
and even something as innocuous as a single design chair like this one by arne jacobsen is a
persuasive technology because again it communicates an idea of the good life a good life a life that you say you as a
designer consent to by
saying in the good life goods are produced as sustainably or unsustainably as this chair
and where there is something as
conspicuousconsumption where it is okay and
normal to spend a humungous
amount of money on such a chair to signal to other people what your social status
and how does that apply not just to
persuasive technology but to everything you design
why when the question of what the good life is informs everything that we design should we stop at design and not ask ourselves how does it apply to our own life why should the lamp or the house be an art object but not our life as michel foucault puts it
just to give you a practical example of buster benson this is buster
setting up a pull up machine at the office of his new startup habit labs where they 're
trying to build up other applications like health month for people and why is he building a thing like this
well here is the set of axioms that habit labs buster 's startup put up for themselves on how they wanted to work together as a team when they 're building these applications
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