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Building Bridges: Eurocentric to Intercultural Information Ethics

Journal of Contemporary Eastern Asia / Journal of Contemporary Eastern Asia, (E)2383-9449
2021, v.20 no.1, pp.151-168
https://doi.org/https://doi.org/10.17477/jcea.2021.20.1.151
Gautam, Ayesha (Department of Philosophy, University of Delhi)
Singh, Deepa (Indian Council of Philosophical Research (ICPR), Department of Philosophy, University of Delhi)
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Abstract

Misguided use, manipulation, misappropriation, disruption and mismanagement of Information deeply affects the infosphere as well as the social and moral fabric of a society. Information ethics is an attempt to bring the creation, organization, dissemination, and use of information within the ambit of ethical standards and moral codes. The diverse and inherently pluralistic nature of societies however puts forth an additional demand on us - to come up with an intercultural information ethics. An intercultural ethics which is other-centric, context sensitive and workable without being homogenizing, patronizing and colonizing. An endeavor in that direction has already been made by proponents of intercultural information ethics like: Charles M. Ess, Fay Sudweeks, Rafael Capurro, Pak-Hang Wong, Soraj Hongladarom et al. In our paper, we propose that the kind of ethical pluralism being sought in the domain of information ethics can be attained by having a reappraisal of the current methodological strategies, by casting a critical relook at the Eurocentric ethical model. This paper analyses the current framework of Intercultural Information Ethics. And in an endeavour to move towards an all-encompassing, other-centric, workable, intercultural, harmonious and compassionate model of 'Pluralistic Information Ethics', it proposes the Indian / Asian philosophical method of 'Samvāda' to the current inventory which includes methods like: 'parrhesia/free speech' and 'interpretive phronēsis.

keywords
Information Ethics (IE), Intercultural Information Ethics (IIE), Samvad, Infosphere, Dialogue, Parrhesia, Eurocentrism, phronesis

Journal of Contemporary Eastern Asia