Skip to main content
Theme
English
Location

Academy Building
Broerstraat 5
Groningen
Netherlands

Tickets
€3,- / free with student- or SG-discountcard

Gobalization, Social Media and Ethics

How technology and society affect our moral judgment
Jennifer Jordan and Frank Hindriks

Originally Hanno Sauer was scheduled to give a lecture but he had to cancel due to personal circumstances, Frank Hindriks will take his place.

Humans are social beings. But the modern world presents a tension between extreme social isolation and extreme public exposure. Jennifer Jordan will discuss how the interplay between globalization and technology affect human moral judgment. 
Technological advances like social media allow humans a constant social “connection” while never leaving the seclusion of their computer terminals. This “pseudo-sociality” allows humans to engage in harmful antisocial behaviors (e.g., bullying, lying) while in the complete privacy and anonymity of the virtual world. At the same time, evidence from social psychology and cognitive neuroscience suggests that moral judgments are largely based on emotionally charged, intuitive processes developed over thousands of years of interpersonal interaction. In the current social milieu, this reality can become especially problematic; if humans’ emotional and intuitive responses have evolved under conditions that are no longer relevant, such intuitive responses might prove faulty and unreliable. Living in a globalized, fast-moving world thus poses special challenges to people’s ethical behavior.
Coming from both a psychological and philosophical perspective, Jennifer Jordan will discuss how the modern interplay between globalization and technology affect human moral judgment. What can we do to enhance the positive and reduce the negative effects of this interplay on our moral behavior? Originally Hanno Sauer was also scheduled to give a lecture but he had to cancel due to personal circumstances.  

Jennifer Jordan is a Rosalind Franklin Fellow and associate professor of Human Resources and Organizational Behavior at the University of Groningen. After her education (MS, MPhil, PhD) at Yale University and she worked as a post-doctoral fellow at the Kellogg School of Management and Tuck School of Business. Her research interests primarily include ethics and power. 
Frank Hindriks is adjunct professor in Ethics, Social and Political Philosophy, University of Groningen

Also in this series

Michael Shermer
How Science Leads Humanity Toward Truth, Justice and Freedom
English

We are living in the most moral period of our species’ history. Science and reason have profoundly changed our modern work and bend the arc in a more moral direction.

See also

Placeholder
James C. Coyne
Does Having a Partner Help or Hurt?
English

Do our intimate relationships affect our physical health and recovery from illness? When do our relationships help and when do they make us sick?

Placeholder
Marie-José Bonthuis, Anton Vedder, Stefan Nieuwenhuis
Niets te verbergen en toch bang
Nederlands

Van iedereen die naar Amerika vliegt, een geneesmiddel voorgeschreven krijgt bij de huisarts, simpelweg op het internet surft of mobiel belt zijn (persoonlijke) gegevens bekend.