Open Access
The Symptom of Ethics; Rethinking Ethics in the Face of the Machine
Author(s) -
David J. Gunkel
Publication year - 2022
Publication title -
human machine communication journal/human-machine communication journal
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2638-6038
pISSN - 2638-602X
DOI - 10.30658/hmc.4.4
Subject(s) - argument (complex analysis) , subjectivity , subject (documents) , operationalization , epistemology , face (sociological concept) , normative ethics , psychoanalytic theory , moral philosophy , sociology , element (criminal law) , philosophy , psychology , psychoanalysis , computer science , law , social science , political science , medicine , library science
This essay argues that it is the machine that constitutes the symptom of ethics— “symptom” understood as that excluded “part that has no part” in the system of moral consideration. Ethics, which has been historically organized around a human or at least biological subject, needs the machine to define the proper limits of the moral community even if it simultaneously excludes such mechanisms from any serious claim on moral consideration. The argument will proceed in five steps or movements. The first part will define and characterize “the symptom” as it has been operationalized in the work of Slovenian philosopher Slavoj Žižek. Although Žižek appropriates this term from Jacques Lacan, he develops the concept in a unique way that exceeds Lacan’s initial psychoanalytic formulations. The second and third parts will demonstrate how the machine constitutes the symptom of moral philosophy, showing how and why it comprises the always already excluded element necessary to define the proper limits of moral subjectivity. The fourth part will then consider two alternatives that promise, but ultimately fail, to accommodate this symptom. And the final section will draw out the consequences of this analysis for ethics and its excluded others.