PAGES

409 – 413

DOI

10.13169/prometheus.37.4.0409
©
Leah Henrickson.

Contact The Author


All content is freely available without charge to users or their institutions. Users are allowed to read, download, copy, distribute, print, search, or link to the full texts of the articles in this journal without asking prior permission of the publisher or the author. Articles published in the journal are distributed under a http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/.

Issues

Also in this issue:

Juan Enriquez, Right/Wrong: How Technology Transforms Our Ethics

Leah Henrickson.

Right/Wrong: How Technology Transforms our Ethics by Juan Enriquez (2020) MIT Press, Cambridge MA, 304pp., $US25 (hardback) $US17 (paperback) ISBN: 9780262044424

In the American sitcom The Good Place (2016–20), a group of characters – all deceased – attempt to upgrade themselves from ‘the bad place’ to ‘the good place’. Among the group is a moral philosophy professor, Chidi Anagonye. Chidi offers lessons on ethics and quips about the need for ethical behaviour when the characters repeatedly make questionable decisions that satisfy their hedonistic tendencies. He is framed as a stick-in-the-ethical-mud, and is regularly reminded that ‘everyone hates moral philosophy professors’. By the show’s conclusion, however, it is attention to ethics that saves the characters from the bad place, and (spoiler alert!) everyone dies happily ever after.

Your browser does not support PDFs. Download the PDF.

Download PDF