Cyberbullying, Moral Responsibility, and Social Networking: Lessons from the Megan Meier Tragedy
This paper addresses the concepts of moral and social responsibility on the Internet in considering the most troubling phenomenon of cyberbullying that results in loss of life. Specifically, I probe the moral and social responsibilities of Internet users (agents), of the education system in fighting...
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University of Rijeka. Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences
2020-07-01
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doaj-bfe15814b1b6482783fa3072bb4a3dd12020-11-25T03:52:32ZengUniversity of Rijeka. Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences European Journal of Analytic Philosophy1845-84751849-05142020-07-01161759810.31820/ejap.16.1.4Cyberbullying, Moral Responsibility, and Social Networking: Lessons from the Megan Meier TragedyRaphael Cohen-Almagor0https://orcid.org/0000-0002-5869-9243University of HullThis paper addresses the concepts of moral and social responsibility on the Internet in considering the most troubling phenomenon of cyberbullying that results in loss of life. Specifically, I probe the moral and social responsibilities of Internet users (agents), of the education system in fighting cyberbullying, and of Internet intermediaries. Balance needs to be struck between freedom of expression and social responsibility. The tragic story of Megan Meier serves as an illustrative example and some further incidents in which this ugly phenomenon of cyberbullying had cost young life are mentioned. It is argued that all relevant stakeholders need to think of the consequences of their conduct, that Internet abusers should be accountable for their wrongdoing, and that people who have the ability to stop or at least reduce the risk of cyberbullying should take proactive steps, exhibiting zero tolerance to cyberbullying.https://hrcak.srce.hr/240862aristotlebullyinginternetmegan meiermoral and social responsibilitysocial networking |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Raphael Cohen-Almagor |
spellingShingle |
Raphael Cohen-Almagor Cyberbullying, Moral Responsibility, and Social Networking: Lessons from the Megan Meier Tragedy European Journal of Analytic Philosophy aristotle bullying internet megan meier moral and social responsibility social networking |
author_facet |
Raphael Cohen-Almagor |
author_sort |
Raphael Cohen-Almagor |
title |
Cyberbullying, Moral Responsibility, and Social Networking: Lessons from the Megan Meier Tragedy |
title_short |
Cyberbullying, Moral Responsibility, and Social Networking: Lessons from the Megan Meier Tragedy |
title_full |
Cyberbullying, Moral Responsibility, and Social Networking: Lessons from the Megan Meier Tragedy |
title_fullStr |
Cyberbullying, Moral Responsibility, and Social Networking: Lessons from the Megan Meier Tragedy |
title_full_unstemmed |
Cyberbullying, Moral Responsibility, and Social Networking: Lessons from the Megan Meier Tragedy |
title_sort |
cyberbullying, moral responsibility, and social networking: lessons from the megan meier tragedy |
publisher |
University of Rijeka. Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences |
series |
European Journal of Analytic Philosophy |
issn |
1845-8475 1849-0514 |
publishDate |
2020-07-01 |
description |
This paper addresses the concepts of moral and social responsibility on the Internet in considering the most troubling phenomenon of cyberbullying that results in loss of life. Specifically, I probe the moral and social responsibilities of Internet users (agents), of the education system in fighting cyberbullying, and of Internet intermediaries. Balance needs to be struck between freedom of expression and social responsibility. The tragic story of Megan Meier serves as an illustrative example and some further incidents in which this ugly phenomenon of cyberbullying had cost young life are mentioned. It is argued that all relevant stakeholders need to think of the consequences of their conduct, that Internet abusers should be accountable for their wrongdoing, and that people who have the ability to stop or at least reduce the risk of cyberbullying should take proactive steps, exhibiting zero tolerance to cyberbullying. |
topic |
aristotle bullying internet megan meier moral and social responsibility social networking |
url |
https://hrcak.srce.hr/240862 |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT raphaelcohenalmagor cyberbullyingmoralresponsibilityandsocialnetworkinglessonsfromthemeganmeiertragedy |
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