TY - BOOK AU - Sand,Martin ED - SpringerLink (Online service) TI - Technological Utopianism and the Idea of Justice SN - 9783031759451 AV - Q175.4-.55 U1 - 303.483 23 PY - 2025/// CY - Cham PB - Springer Nature Switzerland, Imprint: Palgrave Macmillan KW - Science KW - Social aspects KW - Philosophy KW - Technology KW - Science and Technology Studies KW - Philosophy of Science KW - Philosophy of Technology N1 - Chapter 1. Why utopia instead of what utopia -- Chapter 2. Perfectionism, stagnation and transcendental theorizing -- Chapter 3. Technological anti-anti-utopianism -- Chapter 4. How to and where to justice -- Chapter 5. Justice in technological utopia -- Chapter 6. Conclusions; Open Access N2 - “In this fascinating book, Martin Sand argues that futuristic visions of technological utopias can radically alter our perspective on the world, ourselves, and the role of justice in human life. Throughout the book, Sand convincingly argues that technological utopias can inspire new conceptions of justice and forcefully responds to many anti-utopian arguments. A must-read for anybody interested in the controversial topic of technological utopias!” - Sven Nyholm, Professor of the Ethics of Artificial Intelligence at LMU Munich. This open access book advances a modest defence of technological utopias. While technological utopianism is not devoid of risks and elitism, their benefits should not be discounted in an overall assessment. Rather than rejecting them based on a too narrow definition of utopianism, we must acknowledge their potential to exceed the individualist vs. collectivist dichotomy ascribed to traditional utopias. The author argues with reference to Rawls’ idea of the basic structure that technological utopias challenge our understanding of the scope and location of justice and, thereby, advance the idea of justice. The book critically reviews the most recent literature in political philosophy, where utopias are understood as ideal theories of justice and sides with recent contributions to Utopian Studies, where utopias’ potential to estrange from the present and galvanize action are underscored. Martin Sand is an Assistant Professor of Ethics and Philosophy of Technology at TU Delft and a Board Member of the Delft Young Academy. He was a member of the theme group on “Accountable and Explainable Medical AI” at the Netherlands Institute for Advanced Study (NIAS), Amsterdam. Before, he undertook a two-year Marie Skłodowska-Curie-Fellowship project on “Moral Luck in Science and Innovation” UR - https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-031-75945-1 ER -