Sunday, October 7, 2007

an informal survey

I think by this point of the course, it is more than established that virtual communities do form and count by classical terms as communities (Geimenshaft) I wonder, though, how through the ethos of these communities (which are invariably, recent) a rudimentary moral code could form. Is virtual morality an extension of real-world morality, or does it follow a different pattern in permissibility? I would think it important to consider the cross-cultural hybrid communities that form. Maybe the fact that actual (i use actual to mean real-world) societies' differ in their concepts of moral vs. conventional rules a renegotiation of what the filter is for morality is necessary.
Can virtual communities be, in a sense, liminal spaces for morality? Does a moral code necessarily arise from a community? Does the lack of physical presence limit the need for a moral code (limited ability to produce physical harm etc)

I just want to know what others think.

2 comments:

Lorraine Richards Bornn said...

Wow, these are great questions and thoughts and I haven't had the time to really digest them yet, but I do have a couple of off-the-cuff "reactions"/responses.
(1) I think that it would be a mistake to assume that a moral code arises FROM a community, that to assume this occurs by inserting a false dichotomy between the individual and the community. From my perspective the individual is (to use Heidegger's odd phrase) "thrown" into the world - we are individuals only in relation to our communities and our ability to define the morality of our community is as much a result of our capacity to recognize our own (pre-existent) morality as our ability to develop our morality is a result of our community's (pre-existent) norms and morals. To put it like Plato did, society is the individual writ large. Hence, I believe that morality inherently exists within any community virtual or not. However, you hit the real issue with your last question --
(2) "Does the lack of physical presence limit the need for a moral code..." I have two thoughts about this -- First, I don't think that the lack of physical presence online implies a lack of ability to harm in the so-called "real" world. Quite the contrary - the possibilities for harm may in fact be greater because this is an environment with which we are much less familiar -- hence our abilities to assess risk are probably still quite rudimentary, making it potentially easier for the skilled traveller in virtual realms to wilfully harm someone else. Also, I think we need to distinguish between morality (which could be implicitly known without being consciously spelled out) and consciously enunciated moral codes. They are not necessarily the same thing.

Anonymous said...

I think that that a moral code does arise from community. Back to a discussion we had in class regarding citizen media sites and modeling, I think we referred to the case where someone posted pictures of a fire, and then others subsequently followed posting pictures when similar events occured. The first pictures in essence created a "model" for other posters to follow. I think this same type of phenomenon can extend to the idea of a moral code in which we could have a virtual community where the praise or reproach of immoral acts by community members dictates what is or is not acceptable in the community. I agree that morality inherently exists within any community, but I think the virtual community itself decides its own moral code based on modeling.