Vertical Technologies and Relational Values: Rethinking Ethics of Technology in an Age of Extractivism
Publication date
2025-08-30
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Abstract
Critical reflection on the material, environmental, and social conditions underlying technology remains peripheral to the field of technology ethics. In this commentary, I underwrite the diagnosis by Vandemeulebroucke et al. (2025) that the field suffers from an "extractivist blindspot", but propose a somewhat different cure. First, rather than focusing on the material ontogenesis of technical artefacts, a more radical turn away from artefacts is called for, towards layered socio-technical systems as the field's core object of analysis. Second, notwithstanding the merits of their intercultural proposal, I argue that in overcoming extractivism the conceptual resources of more adjacent philosophical traditions should not be overlooked.
Keywords
Empirical turn, Extractivism, Intercultural philosophy of technology, Relational values, Socio-technical systems, Vertical technologies, Philosophy, History and Philosophy of Science
Citation
Hopster, J 2025, 'Vertical Technologies and Relational Values : Rethinking Ethics of Technology in an Age of Extractivism', Philosophy and Technology, vol. 38, no. 3, 124. https://doi.org/10.1007/s13347-025-00962-w