Listening to algorithms: The case of self‐knowledge

Author:

Doyle Casey1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Binghamton University Binghamton New York USA

Abstract

AbstractThis paper begins with the thought that there is something out of place about offloading inquiry into one's own mind to AI. The paper's primary goal is to articulate the unease felt when considering cases of doing so. It draws a parallel between the use of algorithms in the criminal law: in both cases one feels entitled to be treated as an exception to a verdict made on the basis of a certain kind of evidence. Then it identifies an account of first‐person authority that can make good on this: agentialism. Thus, the paper constitutes an argument in favor of an agentialist treatment of self‐knowledge and first‐person authority.

Publisher

Wiley

Reference51 articles.

1. Privacy and the question of technology;Austin L.;Law and Philosophy,2003

2. What we epistemically owe to each other

3. Two Kinds of Self-Knowledge

4. Our Entitlement to Self-Knowledge

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