I am a PhD candidate in philosophy at The New School for Social Research. My research interests are primarily social epistemology, ethics, and political philosophy. My work focuses on trust, the ethics of belief, and group epistemology. However, my view involves social metaphysics, philosophy of mind, and AI ethics as well.
My research examines the trust relationships on which knowledge depends. My work offers a view of how epistemically unhealthy communities are different from healthy ones. I've written about the responsibility of the collectives involved in disinformation campaigns, who abuse trust by making very implausible views appear …
I am a PhD candidate in philosophy at The New School for Social Research. My research interests are primarily social epistemology, ethics, and political philosophy. My work focuses on trust, the ethics of belief, and group epistemology. However, my view involves social metaphysics, philosophy of mind, and AI ethics as well.
My research examines the trust relationships on which knowledge depends. My work offers a view of how epistemically unhealthy communities are different from healthy ones. I've written about the responsibility of the collectives involved in disinformation campaigns, who abuse trust by making very implausible views appear credible to large audiences. I'm currently writing about how echo chambers abuse the trust of community members and the sense in which they are a distinctive type of epistemic community. Next, I will apply my view of epistemic responsibility to AI and social media sites, two important sources of information that seem to elude responsibility.