This article was automatically translated from the original Turkish version.
+2 More
Digital conscience is a concept that describes how individuals and societies in the digital age express and experience ethical awareness, responsibility, and moral responses through digital environments. This concept particularly refers to the tendency to soothe one’s conscience through symbolic online actions such as likes, shares, and comments—actions performed on social media and other digital platforms without assuming concrete moral responsibility in the real world.
Digital conscience raises the question of whether the attitudes individuals display on digital platforms in response to social events, humanitarian crises, and ethical issues constitute genuine moral responses. The concept describes a condition in which the connection between conscience and action has weakened, and moral responsibility is often reduced to symbolic digital reactions. In this sense, it highlights the growing distance between sensitivity and responsibility in the digital age.
As digitalization accelerates, individuals’ moral responses in the public sphere have largely shifted to digital platforms. Digital conscience reflects a new form of social awareness emerging from this transformation. It offers a framework that questions the real-world equivalents, level of action, and continuity of the sensitivities expressed in digital environments.
Digital conscience is directly related to debates in digital ethics. While digital ethics examines the moral boundaries and principles arising from human and AI-assisted interactions, digital conscience serves as an indicator of how these boundaries are internalized at individual and societal levels. It emphasizes that ethical attitudes in digital spaces must be shaped not only by codes and rules but also by moral awareness.
The concept of digital conscience is significant for conceptualizing how ethical sensitivity has transformed in response to digitalization in contemporary societies. By examining not only how conscience is expressed in the digital age but also how it relates to action, it holds up a mirror to individual and collective responsibility. In this way, it occupies a central position in discussions on morality, responsibility, and human sensitivity in an increasingly digital world.
The term “digital conscience” was selected as the “2025 Word/Concept of the Year” through a public voting process conducted by the Turkish Language Association. The voting was carried out in collaboration with the Center for Communication Research and Applications at Ankara University and concluded with input from public votes and an evaluation committee. The participation of approximately three hundred thousand people demonstrated the concept’s resonance within society.
During the voting process, “digital conscience” was presented alongside other concepts for public evaluation, including “moral blindness,” “inaction compassion,” “barrenness,” and “homogenization.” These concepts were regarded as complementary frameworks that describe different manifestations and problem areas of moral sensitivity in the digital age.
Definition and Content
Social and Cultural Context
Relationship with Digital Ethics
Contemporary Meaning and Significance
The “Word of the Year” Process
Conceptual Counterparts