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Structural and Technology-Mediated Violence: Profiling and the Urgent Need of New Tutelary Technoknowledge

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  • Lorenzo Magnani

    (University of Pavia, Italy, and Sun Yat-sen University, China)

Abstract

A kind of common prejudice is the one that tends to assign the attribute “violent” only to physical and possibly bloody acts – homicides, for example – or physical injuries; but linguistic, structural, and other various aspects of violence – also embedded in artifacts – have to be taken into account. The paper will deal with the so-called “technology-mediated violence” taking advantage of the illustration of the case of profiling. If production of knowledge is important and central, this is not always welcome and so people have to acknowledge that the motto introduced in the book Morality in a Technological World (Magnani, 2007) knowledge as a duty has various limitations. Indeed, a warning has to be formulated regarding the problem of identity and cyberprivacy. The author contends that when too much knowledge about people is incorporated in external artificial things, human beings’ “visibility” can become excessive and dangerous. Two aims are in front of people to counteract this kind of technological violence, which also jeopardizes Rechtsstaat and constitutional democracies: preserving people against the various forms of circulation of knowledge about them and building new suitable “technoknowledge” (also to originate new “embodied” legal institutions) to reach this protective result.

Suggested Citation

  • Lorenzo Magnani, 2011. "Structural and Technology-Mediated Violence: Profiling and the Urgent Need of New Tutelary Technoknowledge," International Journal of Technoethics (IJT), IGI Global, vol. 2(4), pages 1-19, October.
  • Handle: RePEc:igg:jt0000:v:2:y:2011:i:4:p:1-19
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