• DocumentCode
    1797276
  • Title

    Physics-like systems in information ethics: Application to lying

  • Author

    Al-Fedaghi, Sabah

  • Author_Institution
    Dept. of Comput. Eng., Kuwait Univ., Safat, Kuwait
  • fYear
    2014
  • fDate
    10-12 Nov. 2014
  • Firstpage
    238
  • Lastpage
    243
  • Abstract
    Information ethics has evolved over the years into a multi-threaded phenomenon stimulated by the convergence of many disciplines in the cyber world. It has been suggested that information ethics can provide an important conceptual framework for understanding a multitude of ethical issues arising as a result of new information technologies. The act of lying is described as the most significantly destructive political act in the Information age, with amplified scope and effects. This paper focuses on one of the major philosophical but controversial approaches to lying: Kant´s deontological principle that unyieldingly demands universal truth. The paper presents a new description derived from physics for Kant´s approach to lying based on a physicists favorite system: gas contained in a box where molecules are free to flow at random, and all possible arrangements of gas molecules in the box can appear in microstates. The main idea is to consider analytical statements (classified as true and false) as elements in an ethical system that takes microscopic truth values and measures them in terms of the macroscopic values of moral and non-moral systems. Just as with the gas in a box, the statements may flow between true and false values, forming a set of states that include maximum entropy, a state in which true and false statements are distributed uniformly. The results shed new light on the conceptual territory that forms the base for such ethical dilemmas as the moral duty to be truthful to a murderer, producing a better understanding of the notion of lying.
  • Keywords
    convergence; ethical aspects; multi-threading; philosophical aspects; physics computing; Kan deontological principle; convergence; ethical system; information ethics; microscopic truth values; multithreaded phenomenon; philosophical approaches; physics-like systems; Entropy; Ethics; Microscopy; Privacy; Societies; Thermodynamics; Information ehics; Kant; categotical imperative; entropy; information; lying;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • Conference_Titel
    Information Society (i-Society), 2014 International Conference on
  • Conference_Location
    London
  • Type

    conf

  • DOI
    10.1109/i-Society.2014.7009051
  • Filename
    7009051