Catholic
Colleges & Universities Questions of roborats, cybertheft and fatal
bugs
By PATRICIA LEFEVERE
Bronx, N.Y.
On the pull-down computer projection screen at the front of their
classroom, a group of Fordham University seniors learn that scientists at the
State University of New Yorks Downstate Medical Center in Brooklyn have
turned rats into intelligent robots by implanting electrodes in their brains
and strapping power packs onto their backs.
Thus equipped the rodents can be used in search and destroy,
reconnaissance or rescue missions. But just because the roborats
might save a life -- even a firefighter, soldier or a childs life -- is
it ethical to use rats to do a controllers bidding?
The question, posed in an online article assigned to the students,
is one of many that Jesuit Fr. Nicholas Lombardi puts to the 20 students in his
senior values seminar, titled Cyberspace, Ethics and Issues. It
meets for 75 minutes twice weekly. This is the fourth year Lombardi is teaching
the course. Feedback from students indicates, Its cutting edge --
the most relevant class they do, he told NCR.
At first students saw nothing wrong in using rats as robots.
We kill chickens and eat them for our benefit, one offered. I
find it difficult to argue dont use rats, commented another who
wants mosquitoes -- the greatest killers on earth -- eliminated
before rats.
Before the animal rights defenders could take on those upholding
the food chain hierarchy, Lombardi interjected: The point is not whether
its right or wrong, but rather how unobvious it is that
its right or wrong.
Probing notions of right and
wrong
Lombardi said he wants students to probe where their notions of
right and wrong originate. How do they make moral determinations? Why do they
feel the way they do? What sources inform their opinions? How do they form
absolute judgments?
He said he sees his job as trying to make up for a
pseudo-liberal attitude that says students should be free to pick
and choose their own value systems, decide whats right or wrong on their
own. The result of such nurturing in middle schools and high schools is that
most college students today are fairly good at critical thinking, but many are
deprived of strong opinions. They dont want to force strong
opinions on anyone, Lombardi said during an interview in the Faculty
Resource Center, a state-of-the-art technology center he directs.
Stealing is bad, Lombardi told the class as he moved
from student to student, pulling an unoccupied desk upright and using it as a
lectern or sitting sidesaddle on another one directly in front of a row of
students. The effort to engage them in the discourse occurred on many
fronts.
An out-of-work mom can steal bread, he said. Or
can she? The priest, dressed in a white lab coat over his clerical collar
and shirt, pivoted toward the students, tossing the question into their laps.
Im open to interpretation.
Its illegal, one student offered. You can
get arrested for stealing.
Lombardi countered that not everything thats legal is moral
or obviously good. He probes their understanding of the role of emotions,
intuition, law, religion, majority opinion and common sense in an effort to get
them to investigate the origins of their own values system.
A classicist by training, Lombardi offered insights on the meaning
of vendetta from the story of Oedipus. He talked of Roman law and
of conscience -- from its Latin roots. Conscience is what you come
to know deep down and earnestly agree with, he said.
No student should leave Fordham or any other college or university
without values grounded in an informed conscience, he said. The goal of the
senior seminar is to deliver the tools students need to face future moral
issues arising in the workplace, in health care, politics, in the media as well
as in the area of relationships and parenting.
Personal issues and social concerns grounded in Christian personal
and social ethics are the starting points for his class discussions. He wants
students to build upon their background in academia and apply it to the
practical issues of daily life in the technological world. He encourages them
to question and develop their own values as experienced in their studies and
culture and to share them with seminar participants. Through class
presentations, students become enabled to express an informed conscience, he
said.
Lombardis hope is that once students have encountered the
Jesuit ideals of learning and questioning, and have developed an informed
conscience, they will contribute to society on the particular moral questions
posed in modern technology.
Among key issues the class is looking at this semester are those
of software ownership and intellectual property, of software piracy, viruses,
defective software, documentation, information access and privacy.
Ethics applied
Last falls seminar became heavily engaged over the privacy
issue with many viewing it as a tradeoff, the priest said. Of
course its OK for Amazon.com to try to sell you other stuff based on your
previous purchases, argued some students, while others wanted their personal
data protected.
Lombardi recalled that, as the discussion grew more polarized, one
student asked his fellow participants: Do you people really care? Have
you done something that anyone shouldnt know, that you have to
hide? Everyone laughed.
In 1999 Lombardi published an article in America magazine
titled Borrowing or Cybertheft in which he argued that its
stealing to copy someone elses disk for your own use when you
havent purchased the installation disks. In 1982 when Lombardi wrote and
sold his first computer programs, he said he didnt give much thought to
trying out software that he hadnt paid for himself. But after
spending sleepless nights writing and debugging his own programs, his attitude
changed drastically.
In the early 1980s Lombardi became fascinated by the
computers potential for interaction after playing Space Invaders
for hours with another Jesuit. He soon designed drills in Greek and Latin and
sold them to Atari. He also developed a tutorial on the passive voice and
multiple choice computer quizzes for Homers The Odyssey. In 1990
he studied artificial intelligence with an IBM executive who had worked in the
field for three decades.
There was no question in my mind about intellectual property
rights. There was no question that the stuff I wrote was mine and that I could
give it away or sell it, but no one else had any right to take, use, sell or
swap it without my consent. Suddenly I realized that software doesnt just
drop out of the sky and isnt just produced by big amorphous conglomerates
with lots of money, but by people like me.
Students gave the Napster response to his argument,
equating his position with that taken by record companies who claim exclusive
rights to wealth they didnt create. They asked: What about artists
who want to get their stuff known by the public?
Lombardi countered that piracy robs artists of legitimate
royalties. He familiarized his students with phrases like
rationalization, denial and conditioning --
key concepts in understanding ethics.
When I wrote that [America] article I thought in more
black and white categories than I do now, Lombardi said. His own desk is
framed with 54 installation disks -- all purchased by Lombardi. The desk
occupies the corner of the Faculty Resource Center. The center prepares faculty
members to use computer technology in their classrooms.
Some of the old dogs, who think they cant pick it up,
learn quickly, he said, while some younger ones need much more
time.
Unsafe equipment
Learning to operate the equipment is a lot easier than probing the
challenges that computers pose, he said. There are so many implications
of new technology that people havent noticed yet. Computers are
giving results we cant check or may take years to check, he said. The
rush to produce and deploy new computer products in an all-competing industry
has spawned untested and unsafe equipment and programs, he added, pointing to
an X-ray machine that has killed a number of people because of a bug in
the system they cant control.
Besides questions of individual vs. corporate responsibility,
Lombardi requires his seniors to research social issues in the computer realm.
These include computer crime, hackers and piracy, cryptography and national
security, product service, computer communication and freedom of expression,
and questions about what manufacturers owe the consumer and community.
Whos accountable for fatal bugs? he asked,
noting in the interview that our nuclear arsenal is controlled by
computers, as are chemical formulas and medical tests and treatments. A
bug in any of these systems can kill.
Lombardi expresses alarm that questions of technology and ethics
are so undercovered by ethicists, theologians and religion teachers.
There are no laws, no common ground in this field yet. Clearly, Lombardi
hopes that graduates from Fordham and other Catholic colleges and universities
will fill these gaps.
To be a Catholic institution of higher learning at all means
to give students something they can believe and trust, he said. Lombardi
calls faith and reason
two wings of the human spirit. One of the
things our kids finally come to use after four years is their faith, but they
forget its reasonable. Our faith is not superstitious or
irrational.
He pointed to teachings of the early church fathers and the
councils, which grew out of spirited debates and consensus. For
heavens sake, the Catholic church invented the university.
Patricia Lefevere is an NCR special report
writer.
National Catholic Reporter, October 25,
2002
|