Centre for Technomoral Futures
To build and sustain futures worth wanting, the human family must close the gap between technology and moral wisdom.
Our Centre’s mission is to unify technical and moral knowledge in new models of research, education, design and engagement that directly serve the goals of sustainable, just and ethical innovation.
Our current portfolio of activities, supported by an initial gift from the global investment firm Baillie Gifford, focuses upon the ethical implications of present and future advances in AI, machine learning and other data-driven technologies.
As part of the Edinburgh Futures Institute (EFI) at The University of Edinburgh, we support EFI’s larger aim: to pursue and promote the participatory knowledge and critical understanding needed to support society’s navigation of complex futures. Our shared goal is to help people create and shape more resilient, sustainable and equitable forms of life.
The Centre for Technomoral Futures is a home for developing more constructive modes of innovation: innovation that preserves and strengthens human ties and capabilities; that builds more accessible and just paths to public participation in the co-creation of our futures; and that reinvests the power of technology into the repair, maintenance and care of our communities and our planet.
What is the Centre for Technomoral Futures?
Hear Director Shannon Vallor, Chancellor’s Fellow Atoosa Kasirzadeh, and CTMF PhD students speak about the Centre and its mission.
Our History and Relationships
Our current portfolio of activities, supported by an initial gift from the global investment firm Baillie Gifford, focuses upon the ethical implications of present and future advances in AI, machine learning and other data-driven technologies.
Launched in 2020 as an integral part of the University of Edinburgh’s Futures Institute, the Centre supports EFI’s larger aim: to pursue and promote the participatory knowledge and critical understanding needed to support society’s navigation of complex futures. Our shared goal is to help people create and bring forth more resilient, sustainable and equitable forms of life.
The Centre for Technomoral Futures represents a cross-cutting theme at the Edinburgh Futures Institute: the ethical implications of data analytics and artificial intelligence. This theme is crucial for The University of Edinburgh’s aim, as set out in Strategy 2030, to become a global leader in artificial intelligence and the use of data with integrity.
The Centre for Technomoral Futures advances that aim by promoting and facilitating the integration of technical and moral knowledge. We are a home for developing more constructive modes of innovation: innovation that preserves and strengthens human ties and capabilities; that builds more accessible and just paths to public participation in the co-creation of our futures; and that reinvests the power of technology into the repair, maintenance and care of our communities and our planet.
The Centre for Technomoral Futures will eventually occupy the new home of the Edinburgh Futures Institute in the restored Old Royal Infirmary of Edinburgh on Lauriston Place (currently under construction). To learn more about this exciting space, click below.
Read more about the Edinburgh Futures Institute
The Edinburgh Futures Institute is one of five hubs of innovation created as part of the Data-Driven Innovation (DDI) Programme, and established through the Edinburgh and South East Scotland City Region Deal.
At the Edinburgh Futures Institute we challenge, create, and make change happen. Focused on tackling today’s increasingly complex issues and shaping a better future; we bring extraordinary intellects from diverse academic disciplines together in one curious, open-minded, thought laboratory to spark the unexpected. The impact lasts a lifetime.
The Edinburgh Futures website https://efi.ed.ac.uk
To read more about the DDI Programme, The City Region Deal and other hubs of innovation please visit: https://ddi.ac.uk/
Our Philosophy
We strive to embed technomoral wisdom in the design of possible futures. Technical and moral knowledge have long been treated as separate kinds of expertise, but this is a damaging and artificial split, one that our Centre works to mend.
Technology's value lies solely in its power to transform our world in ways that enable better lives; it is therefore inseparable from knowledge of how to live well, which is the domain of ethics and morality.
Morality is a body of social techniques for living good lives together, and it is therefore inseparable from the technical knowledge that we use to build human values into the world we share with others.
To envision, design, build, and sustain environments where shared flourishing is possible, we must first reunite these two bodies of knowledge and skill, and the good ends they promote. The result of that synthesis is technomoral wisdom.
Our Mission
Our Centre unifies technical and moral knowledge in new models of research, education, design, and engagement that promote wiser approaches to future-building, by enabling more sustainable, just and ethical forms of innovation.
Drawing strength from EFI’s multidisciplinary network of researchers, designers, and practitioners reaching across the University of Edinburgh’s schools and hubs of Data-Driven Innovation, we seek to open up traditionally siloed ways of thinking about and building good futures. Through civic engagement and private and public collaborations, we aim to open the study of technomoral futures to the wisdom of impacted communities and publics that has been long neglected.
While retaining the critical rigor of traditional academic inquiry, our programmes and activities will be custom-built to meet the growing moral, political and technical challenges of building equitable and thriving futures in the Edinburgh City Region, Scotland and beyond.
Learn more about the Centre’s context and challenge
Professor Shannon Vallor
Director, Centre for Technomoral Futures
Email: ctmf@ed.ac.uk
The Centre is led by Director Shannon Vallor, the Baillie Gifford Chair in Ethics of Data and Artificial Intelligence at the Edinburgh Futures Institute. In addition to her role at EFI, she holds an appointment in the University of Edinburgh’s Department of Philosophy and chairs the University’s AI and Data Ethics Advisory Board.
A word from our Director
Talk of the need for ‘responsible innovation’ is now commonplace. 'Data ethics’ and ‘AI ethics’ are new areas of research benefiting from intensive investment and growing attention from industry, public policymakers, and governments.
But we must move beyond a view of ethics as an external constraint upon technical innovation, itself assumed to be morally ‘neutral.’
Technology is never morally neutral, as scholars in technology studies have known for many decades. All technologies embed value judgments about what is good for us to achieve, produce, accelerate, measure, repair, or build.
Value judgments are incorporated—consciously or implicitly—into technologies through human practices of design, development and deployment and through our choices about who technology will benefit.
Technology is also a source of power, and no significant increase of power within a community is morally neutral. Power alters the entitlements, obligations, and structures of relationships among peoples and nations. Power shapes whose voices are heard and whose rights are recognized. When power shifts, the flow of justice often shifts with it.
Just as technology is never morally neutral, morality in everyday life is reliant upon technique: social, political and material ways of effectively expressing our values in our actions, relationships, communities and institutions.
Technology and moral values are therefore interwoven. Together, they enable us to critically orient ourselves toward the design of possible, better futures. Cleaved apart, they leave us rudderless and lost.
Technology is thus much more than devices and gadgets. It's a vast range of tools and techniques we use to build our values, needs, desires, and hopes for the future into the material, social, and informational worlds we inhabit.
In turn, morality consists of the many cultural and philosophical techniques humans have developed for identifying social worlds and futures that would be good for us to inhabit, and that we would be wise to work together to build in ethical ways.
Good futures cannot be invented and sustained with technology or morality alone; they require technomoral expertise in concretely embedding ethical ways of life into our built worlds.
Today, wise technomoral innovation is more important than ever, as data-driven advances in artificial intelligence and machine learning, robotics, data science, smart devices and algorithmic automation reshape our social, political, and physical environments and bring more of our public institutions, goods, services and relationships online. It is essential that these rapid changes to the shape of our world be guided by intellectually rigorous, creative and deeply integrated applications of technomoral wisdom.
Yet this path has been blocked by the artificial and socially corrosive divide between technical and moral knowledge, for centuries walled off from one another by perceived disciplinary boundaries between scientific, technical and humane modes of research and innovation.
Hampering our cultivation of technomoral wisdom further are the social barriers that have cut off the knowledge produced in elite academic institutions from the knowledge of how to live well and build well that is learned in other kinds of communities.
The long-enforced institutional separation of technical and moral wisdom has made it harder to predict and prevent unintended harms associated with new technologies, and harder to maintain, repair and improve the condition of our social institutions.
This false divide has imposed a heavy cost, one that now reveals itself to be compounded with interest: the cost is rapidly spreading distrust in experts and evidence; weakened public confidence in the legitimacy of our academic and political institutions, and loss of faith in the human ability and moral will to design and build wiser, more sustainable futures.
This is the challenge that our Centre strives to meet. Our students, staff, affiliates and programmes are charting new paths to technomoral wisdom by weaving together diverse strands of technical expertise in computing, data science, engineering and design with expertise in moral philosophy and applied ethics, policy, law, arts and social science.
In shedding new ethical light on the control and use of agricultural data, or investigating the impact of algorithmic allocation of health care on citizens agency, or revealing the values implicit in machine learning measurement and prediction, or designing responsibility frameworks to enable more trustworthy governance of autonomous systems --as well as many other projects like these – we at the Centre draw upon a vast array of domain expertise and cross-disciplinary skills within the EFI and University community, and our partners and communities across Scotland, the UK and the world.
Yet bringing disciplinary experts together is not enough. To permanently bridge these diverse communities of knowledge practice, we need to forge new and more inclusive technomoral research cultures, skills, vocabularies, methodologies, and incentives. These new cultures must enlarge and enrich our conception of who is an expert, of who has wisdom to share, to include the knowledge of those who live with, and without, technologies from perspectives excluded or devalued by prior research. These are the foundations needed to support wiser ways of envisioning and building futures than the past century has allowed.
New foundations take time to build; yet the task they support is increasingly urgent. We are grateful to the Baillie Gifford investment firm and to the University of Edinburgh for the initial ten-year commitment to the Centre and its mission. Our work has just begun; in keeping with EFI’s motto of patet omnibus, inherited from the Old Royal Infirmary that will become EFI’s home in 2023, we hold ourselves open to all who would join us in this labour.
Professor Shannon Vallor, Baillie Gifford Chair in the Ethics of Data and AI
Director of the Centre for Technomoral Futures at the Edinburgh Futures Institute (EFI)