A Virtue Ethics-Based Framework for Technology Design

Keywords: virtue ethics, Catholic social teaching, common good, design patterns, HCI, the Internet, AI
Fall 2021 - Present
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Description

Virtue ethics is a philosophical tradition that emphasizes the cultivation of virtues in achieving the common good. It has been suggested to be an effective framework for envisioning more ethical technology, yet previous work on virtue ethics and technology design has remained at theoretical recommendations. Therefore, we propose an approach for identifying user experience design patterns that embody particular virtues to more concretely articulate virtuous technology designs. As a proof of concept for our approach, we documented seven design patterns for social media that uphold the virtues of Catholic Social Teaching. We interviewed 24 technology researchers and industry practitioners to evaluate these patterns. We found that overall the patterns enact the virtues they were identified to embody; our participants valued that the patterns fostered intentional conversations and personal connections. We pave a path for technology professionals to incorporate diverse virtue traditions into the development of technologies that support human flourishing.

This work was supported by the the Responsible Computing Challenge, a partnership of Omidyar Network, Mozilla, Schmidt Futures, Craig Newmark Philanthropies and Mellon Foundation, and by the Institute for Social Concerns at the Unviersity of Notre Dame.

Books

Virtue in Virtual Spaces (Liturgical Press) with Louisa Conwill and Megan Levis

Papers

  • "Design Patterns for the Common Good: Building Better Technologies
    Using the Wisdom of Virtue Ethics,"
    Louisa Conwill, Megan Levis, Karla Badillo-Urquiola, Walter Scheirer,
    Proceedings of the ACM CHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems,
    April 2025.