Deceptive Patterns
‹ All reading

Personal Autonomy and (Digital) Technology: An Enactive Sensorimotor Framework

Author
Marta Pérez-Verdugo, Xabier E. Barandiaran
Date
1 Dec 2023
Publisher
Philosophy & Technology
Focus
Ethics & Responsibility
Category
Academic Scholar

It is argued that, by favouring/obstructing the enactment of certain (networks of) habits over others, technologies can directly act upon the authors’ personal autonomy, locally and globally.

Many digital technologies, designed and controlled by intensive data-driven corporate platforms, have become ubiquitous for many of our daily activities. This has raised political and ethical concerns over how they might be threatening our personal autonomy. However, not much philosophical attention has been paid to the specific role that their hyper-designed (sensorimotor) interfaces play in this regard. In this paper, we aim to offer a novel framework that can ground personal autonomy on sensorimotor interaction and, from there, directly address how technological design affects personal autonomy. To do this, we will draw from enactive sensorimotor approaches to cognition, focusing on the central notion of habits, understood as sensorimotor schemes that, in networked relations, give rise to sensorimotor agency.