The State of the System: Political Science in 2025

For the final entry of the year on iversonsoftware.com, we analyze the “System Update” of global governance: Today in Political Science. As we close out 2025, the discipline has shifted from studying traditional institutions to analyzing the “New Geopolitics”—the intersection of algorithmic governance, digital sovereignty, and the restructuring of international alliances.

At Iverson Software, we monitor the protocols that keep the world running. Political Science is the study of power—who has it, how it is exercised, and the systems (governments, parties, and international bodies) that distribute it. Today, that “power” is increasingly defined by code, data, and the ability to control the digital narrative.

1. The Rise of “Digital Sovereignty”

In 2025, the most significant trend in political science is the move away from borderless globalization toward Digital Sovereignty.

  • The Fragmented Net: Nation-states are increasingly building “walled gardens” within the internet to protect their domestic information environments.

  • Data as Territory: Governments now treat data as a physical resource, similar to oil or land. Political scientists are studying how laws like the “Data Localization Acts” of the mid-2020s have redefined the limits of state power in a virtual world.

2. Algorithmic Governance and “Liquid” Democracy

The way we interact with the “State” is undergoing a major UI overhaul.

  • Automated Bureaucracy: Many administrative functions—from tax processing to social service allocation—are now managed by AI. Political science today focuses on “Algorithmic Accountability”—ensuring the “code” of the state remains transparent and fair.

  • Direct Digital Participation: We are seeing the “Beta Testing” of liquid democracy in smaller jurisdictions, where citizens can use blockchain-verified platforms to vote directly on local issues or delegate their “vote-token” to trusted experts in real-time.

3. The New Multipolarity: Beyond the G7

The “International System” has been re-indexed. The old post-Cold War hierarchy has been replaced by a more complex, Multipolar Network.

  • Regional Blocks: Organizations like BRICS+ and the African Union have gained significant “System Permissions” in global trade and security.

  • Non-State Actors: Political scientists are now forced to treat large technology conglomerates as quasi-states, given their influence over global communication, infrastructure, and even space exploration.

4. Polarization and the “Information Silo” Bug

The biggest “Stability Threat” to modern democracies remains Affective Polarization.

  • The Feedback Loop: Algorithms designed for engagement have created “Information Silos,” where citizens exist in different versions of reality.

  • Democratic Resilience: Current research is focused on “System Patches” for democracy—finding ways to bridge these silos through deliberative assemblies and neutral, AI-moderated public forums.


Why Political Science Matters Today

  • Strategic Foresight: Understanding the shift toward multipolarity allows businesses and developers to navigate the regulatory landscape of different global regions more effectively.

  • Civic Architecture: By studying how “Digital Sovereignty” works, we can advocate for a future where technology empowers citizens rather than just providing new tools for state surveillance.

  • Systemic Stability: Recognizing the “Bugs” in our current democratic models is the first step toward coding a more resilient and inclusive social contract for the next decade.

Ethics in the Field: Navigating Applied Ethics

For the next installment in our philosophical series on iversonsoftware.com, we transition from theory to practice with Applied Ethics. While Normative Ethics provides the “Operating System,” Applied Ethics is the “User Interface”—it’s where high-level moral principles meet the messy, real-world complications of business, technology, and life.

At Iverson Software, we know that code is only useful when it runs in a production environment. Similarly, ethical theories are only useful when they help us solve specific dilemmas. Applied Ethics is the branch of philosophy that takes normative frameworks (like Utilitarianism or Deontology) and applies them to controversial, real-world issues. It is the “troubleshooting guide” for the most difficult questions of our time.

1. The Multi-Domain Architecture

Applied Ethics isn’t a single field; it’s a collection of “Specialized Modules” tailored to different industries. Every professional environment has its own unique “Edge Cases”:

  • Bioethics: Dealing with the “hardware” of life itself—gene editing (CRISPR), end-of-life care, and the ethical distribution of limited medical resources.

  • Business Ethics: Managing the “Social Contract” of the marketplace—fair trade, corporate social responsibility (CSR), and the balance between profit and labor rights.

  • Environmental Ethics: Governing our relationship with the “Natural Infrastructure”—sustainable development, climate change mitigation, and our duties to non-human species.

2. The Rise of Computer and AI Ethics

In 2025, the most rapidly evolving module is Digital Ethics. As software begins to make autonomous decisions, we are forced to hard-code our values into the system:

  • Algorithmic Bias: If an AI “inherits” the biases of its training data, it creates a systemic injustice. Applied ethics asks: How do we audit and “sanitize” these models?

  • Data Privacy: Is data a “Commodity” (to be traded) or a “Human Right” (to be protected)? This debate determines the architecture of every app we build.

  • Automation: As robots replace human labor, what is the “Social SLA” for supporting those displaced by technology?

3. Casuistry: Case-Based Reasoning

One of the most effective tools in applied ethics is Casuistry. Instead of starting with a rigid rule, casuistry looks at “Paradigmatic Cases”—historical examples where a clear ethical consensus was reached.

  • The Workflow: When faced with a new problem (e.g., “Should we ban deepfakes?”), we look for the closest “precedent” (e.g., laws against libel or forgery) and determine how the new case is similar or different.

  • The Benefit: This allows for a flexible, “Agile” approach to ethics that can adapt to new technologies faster than rigid, top-down laws can.

4. The Four Pillars of Applied Ethics

In many fields, particularly healthcare and tech, professionals use a “Principlism” framework to navigate dilemmas. Think of these as the Core APIs of ethical behavior:

  1. Autonomy: Respecting the user’s right to make their own choices (Informed Consent).

  2. Beneficence: Acting in the best interest of the user/client.

  3. Non-Maleficence: The “First, do no harm” directive.

  4. Justice: Ensuring the benefits and burdens of a project are distributed fairly.


Why Applied Ethics Matters to Our Readers

  • Risk Mitigation: Identifying ethical “vulnerabilities” in a project before launch can save a company from massive legal liabilities and brand damage.

  • Building User Trust: In an era of skepticism, transparency about your ethical “Code of Conduct” is a major competitive advantage.

  • Meaningful Innovation: Applied ethics ensures that we aren’t just building things because we can, but because they actually improve the human condition.

The Moral Compass: Why Ethics is the Governance Layer of Technology

At Iverson Software, we build systems, but Ethics determines the values those systems uphold. Ethics—or moral philosophy—is the study of right and wrong, virtue and vice, and the obligations we have toward one another. Whether you are a student, a developer, or a business leader, ethics provides the framework for making decisions that are not just “efficient,” but “right.”

1. Deontology: The Rule-Based System

Deontology, famously championed by Immanuel Kant, argues that morality is based on duties and rules. In the world of technology and information, this is the philosophy of Standard Operating Procedures:

  • Universal Laws: Acting only according to rules that you would want to become universal laws for everyone.

  • Privacy and Consent: The idea that people have an inherent right to privacy that should never be violated, regardless of the potential “data benefits.”

  • Inherent Value: Treating individuals as “ends in themselves” rather than just “users” or “data points” in a system.

2. Utilitarianism: Optimizing for the Greater Good

Utilitarianism focuses on the outcomes of our actions. It suggests that the most ethical choice is the one that produces the greatest good for the greatest number of people.

  • Cost-Benefit Analysis: Evaluating a new software feature based on its net positive impact on society.

  • Resource Allocation: In an educational reference context, this means prioritizing information that has the widest possible utility.

  • The “Bug” in the System: The challenge of utilitarianism is ensuring that the rights of the minority aren’t sacrificed for the benefit of the majority.

3. Virtue Ethics: Building the Character of the Creator

Rather than focusing on rules or outcomes, Virtue Ethics (derived from Aristotle) focuses on the character of the person acting. It asks: “What kind of person would do this?”

  • Integrity: Ensuring that our digital references are accurate and unbiased because we value the virtue of Truth.

  • Practical Wisdom (Phronesis): The ability to apply ethical principles to real-world situations that don’t have a clear rulebook.

  • Professionalism: For developers, this means writing clean, secure code as a matter of personal and professional excellence.

4. Applied Ethics: Facing the Challenges of 2025

Ethics is not just a theoretical exercise; it is a practical necessity for modern challenges:

  • Algorithmic Bias: Ensuring that the AI models we use in educational software don’t reinforce societal prejudices.

  • Data Sovereignty: Respecting the rights of individuals and communities to control their own digital identities.

  • Sustainability: Considering the energy consumption and environmental impact of the servers that power our digital world.


Why Ethics Matters to Our Readers

  • Principled Leadership: Understanding ethics helps you lead teams and projects with a clear sense of purpose and integrity.

  • Critical Evaluation: It allows you to look past a product’s “features” and ask hard questions about its societal impact.

  • Trust and Loyalty: In a crowded market, users gravitate toward companies and platforms that demonstrate a consistent commitment to ethical behavior.