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Who Should We Be Online?
A Social Epistemology for the Internet
Buch von Karen Frost-Arnold
Sprache: Englisch

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Beschreibung
Who Should We Be Online? examines how power and social inequality shape knowledge and fuel misinformation on the internet. Drawing on numerous case studies, Frost-Arnold proposes structural and individual changes to make the internet more conducive to knowledge production and sharing.
Who Should We Be Online? examines how power and social inequality shape knowledge and fuel misinformation on the internet. Drawing on numerous case studies, Frost-Arnold proposes structural and individual changes to make the internet more conducive to knowledge production and sharing.
Über den Autor
Karen Frost-Arnold is Associate Professor of Philosophy at Hobart & William Smith Colleges. Her research focuses on the philosophy of the internet, the epistemology and ethics of trust, social epistemology, philosophy of science, and feminist philosophy.
Inhaltsverzeichnis
  • Acknowledgments

  • Chapter 1: Introduction

  • 1. Frameworks for social epistemology of the internet

  • 1.1. The situated knowledge thesis

  • 1.2. Feminist accounts of objectivity

  • 1.3. Veritistic systems-oriented social epistemology

  • 1.4. Epistemologies of ignorance

  • 1.5. Virtue epistemology

  • 1.6. Epistemic injustice

  • 2. Chapter summaries

  • Chapter 2: Moderators

  • 1. What is online content moderation?

  • 2. Varieties of moderation and censorship debates

  • 3. The epistemic challenges of moderation

  • 4. The virtues of moderators

  • 5. Constraints on moderators

  • 6. Commercial content moderation, epistemic exploitation, and epistemic dumping

  • 7. Algorithms to the rescue?

  • Chapter 3: Imposters and Tricksters

  • 1. Objectivity and truth

  • 1.1. Objectivity and truth in feminist and veritistic epistemology

  • 1.2. Objectivity, truth, and trust

  • 2. Imposters: Undermining objectivity and truth

  • 3. The need for trustworthiness

  • 3.1. Trust and authenticity

  • 3.2. Practical wisdom and trustworthiness

  • 4. Tricksters: Resisting oppression

  • 4.1. The epistemic benefits of betrayal

  • 4.2. Internet tricksters

  • 4.3. Changing epistemic landscapes and trickery

  • 4.4. Who should we be online?

  • Chapter 4: Fakers

  • 1. What is fake news?

  • 2. Causes of the fake news problem

  • 2.1. Cognitive/psychological

  • 2.2. Technological affordances/design features

  • 2.3. Social causes

  • 3. The epistemic damage of fake news

  • 3.1. Fake news and false belief

  • 3.2. Fake news and distrust

  • 4. Fake news and white ignorance

  • 5. Fake news, objectivity, and neutrality

  • 6. Conclusion

  • Chapter 5: Lurkers

  • 1. The internet as a medium for unlearning ignorance

  • 2. What is lurking?

  • 3. The epistemic benefits of lurking

  • 4. Epistemic limitations of lurking

  • 5. Harmful modes of interaction: Ontological expansiveness

  • 6. A virtue epistemology for lurking and online engagement

  • 6.1. Virtues relevant to lurking and engagement

  • 6.2. The importance of practical wisdom

  • 7. Applying the virtue epistemology of lurking

  • 8. Objections and replies

  • Chapter 6: Conclusion

  • Appendix: Internet Research Ethics for Philosophers: Privacy, Positionality, and Power

  • 1. Purpose of this appendix

  • 2. Respecting privacy

  • 2.1. Complications for the 'public data' presumption

  • 2.2. Alternatives to simply quoting material one can access online

  • 3. Protecting the researcher in an environment of online harassment

  • 4. Avoiding epistemic appropriation

  • 5. Cultivating a "traitorous identity" as a researcher

  • References

  • Index

Details
Erscheinungsjahr: 2023
Fachbereich: Allgemeines
Genre: Philosophie
Jahrhundert: Antike
Rubrik: Geisteswissenschaften
Thema: Lexika
Medium: Buch
Seiten: 280
Inhalt: Gebunden
ISBN-13: 9780190089184
ISBN-10: 0190089180
Sprache: Englisch
Einband: Gebunden
Autor: Frost-Arnold, Karen
Hersteller: Oxford University Press, USA
Maße: 236 x 164 x 24 mm
Von/Mit: Karen Frost-Arnold
Erscheinungsdatum: 10.01.2023
Gewicht: 0,558 kg
preigu-id: 125616660
Über den Autor
Karen Frost-Arnold is Associate Professor of Philosophy at Hobart & William Smith Colleges. Her research focuses on the philosophy of the internet, the epistemology and ethics of trust, social epistemology, philosophy of science, and feminist philosophy.
Inhaltsverzeichnis
  • Acknowledgments

  • Chapter 1: Introduction

  • 1. Frameworks for social epistemology of the internet

  • 1.1. The situated knowledge thesis

  • 1.2. Feminist accounts of objectivity

  • 1.3. Veritistic systems-oriented social epistemology

  • 1.4. Epistemologies of ignorance

  • 1.5. Virtue epistemology

  • 1.6. Epistemic injustice

  • 2. Chapter summaries

  • Chapter 2: Moderators

  • 1. What is online content moderation?

  • 2. Varieties of moderation and censorship debates

  • 3. The epistemic challenges of moderation

  • 4. The virtues of moderators

  • 5. Constraints on moderators

  • 6. Commercial content moderation, epistemic exploitation, and epistemic dumping

  • 7. Algorithms to the rescue?

  • Chapter 3: Imposters and Tricksters

  • 1. Objectivity and truth

  • 1.1. Objectivity and truth in feminist and veritistic epistemology

  • 1.2. Objectivity, truth, and trust

  • 2. Imposters: Undermining objectivity and truth

  • 3. The need for trustworthiness

  • 3.1. Trust and authenticity

  • 3.2. Practical wisdom and trustworthiness

  • 4. Tricksters: Resisting oppression

  • 4.1. The epistemic benefits of betrayal

  • 4.2. Internet tricksters

  • 4.3. Changing epistemic landscapes and trickery

  • 4.4. Who should we be online?

  • Chapter 4: Fakers

  • 1. What is fake news?

  • 2. Causes of the fake news problem

  • 2.1. Cognitive/psychological

  • 2.2. Technological affordances/design features

  • 2.3. Social causes

  • 3. The epistemic damage of fake news

  • 3.1. Fake news and false belief

  • 3.2. Fake news and distrust

  • 4. Fake news and white ignorance

  • 5. Fake news, objectivity, and neutrality

  • 6. Conclusion

  • Chapter 5: Lurkers

  • 1. The internet as a medium for unlearning ignorance

  • 2. What is lurking?

  • 3. The epistemic benefits of lurking

  • 4. Epistemic limitations of lurking

  • 5. Harmful modes of interaction: Ontological expansiveness

  • 6. A virtue epistemology for lurking and online engagement

  • 6.1. Virtues relevant to lurking and engagement

  • 6.2. The importance of practical wisdom

  • 7. Applying the virtue epistemology of lurking

  • 8. Objections and replies

  • Chapter 6: Conclusion

  • Appendix: Internet Research Ethics for Philosophers: Privacy, Positionality, and Power

  • 1. Purpose of this appendix

  • 2. Respecting privacy

  • 2.1. Complications for the 'public data' presumption

  • 2.2. Alternatives to simply quoting material one can access online

  • 3. Protecting the researcher in an environment of online harassment

  • 4. Avoiding epistemic appropriation

  • 5. Cultivating a "traitorous identity" as a researcher

  • References

  • Index

Details
Erscheinungsjahr: 2023
Fachbereich: Allgemeines
Genre: Philosophie
Jahrhundert: Antike
Rubrik: Geisteswissenschaften
Thema: Lexika
Medium: Buch
Seiten: 280
Inhalt: Gebunden
ISBN-13: 9780190089184
ISBN-10: 0190089180
Sprache: Englisch
Einband: Gebunden
Autor: Frost-Arnold, Karen
Hersteller: Oxford University Press, USA
Maße: 236 x 164 x 24 mm
Von/Mit: Karen Frost-Arnold
Erscheinungsdatum: 10.01.2023
Gewicht: 0,558 kg
preigu-id: 125616660
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