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DTSTAMP:20260421T090513Z
LOCATION:Bldg. 6 - Room 104
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Stockholm:20260629T163000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Stockholm:20260629T170000
UID:submissions.pasc-conference.org_PASC26_sess125_msa141@linklings.com
SUMMARY:Individualist ethics and division of labor
DESCRIPTION:Nico Formánek (HLRS)\n\nClassical ethics takes persons as orig
 inators of action and thus ethical responsibility. In evaluating actions i
 t also takes persons to be able to have acted differently. We find these p
 rinciples codified in many professional ethics codes. One example is the A
 CM Code of Ethics and Professional Conduct which explicitly addresses the 
 individual "computing professional". Nevertheless the case studies supplie
 d along the ACM Code often analyze scenarios where collective decisions ar
 e central. "Computing professionals" be it in science or business will rea
 lize that these scenarios are closer to practice than the individualistic 
 language of the ethics code itself - artifacts are constructed collectivel
 y, funding or strategic decisions are made externally and responsibility i
 s often diffuse. But not only in computing do we often find ourselves in s
 ituations where our agency is limited and shared. Such problems have of co
 urse not escaped modern ethics. Here I will present some of the concepts t
 hat were developed in response to these questions about collective action,
  intentionality and responsibility and how they might help navigate the ta
 ngle of individual responsibility in a field like HPC which is highly base
 d on the division of labor.\n\nDomain: Chemistry and Materials, Climate, W
 eather, and Earth Sciences, Applied Social Sciences and Humanities\n\nSess
 ion Chairs: Jakob Luettgau (INRIA); Nico Formánek (HLRS); and Jay Lofstead
  (Sandia National Laboratories, University of New Mexico)\n\n
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