Tag Archives: computer ethics

The Attention Economy and the Right to Attention

ISSN 1076-9005
Volume 32, 2025

The Attention Economy and the Right to Attention: Some Lessons from Theravāda and Mahāyāna Thought

Mark Fortney
Dalhousie University

Much of the work in the rapidly growing field of computer ethics relies on the concepts and theories of Western philosophy. With this article my aim is to help stimulate conversations that draw on a wider range of ethical perspectives. I build on recent work on the sense in which the regular operations of the attention economy might violate our right to attention, and I do so through looking to a range of Theravāda and Mahāyāna Buddhist texts. As I argue, these texts should inspire us to realize that we have more than just the right to direct our attention as we will and the right to be free from distraction. This is because there is a third right to attention that the recent literature overlooks, namely the right to strengthen our ordinarily weak capacity to control our attention. Read article