Trust in a Social and Digital World
/Mark Alfano and Colin Klein, in conversation with the contributors to our fifth special issue, seek to encourage a wider dialogue on “establishing which epistemic virtues are needed by agents who navigate epistemic networks such as the Internet.” Alfano and Klein suggest that establishing these virtues “requires developing a philosophical model of secure trust that takes such networks into account” and that also “requires investigating the structure and information flows of contemporary online communities.”
“Trust in a Social and Digital World,” Mark Alfano, Australian Catholic University, AU, and Delft University of Technology, NL, and Colin Klein, Australian National University, AU
“Fake News, Conspiracy, and Intellectual Vice,” Marco Meyer, University of York, UK
“Beyond Testimony: When Online Information Sharing is not Testifying,” Emily Sullivan, Delft University of Technology, NL
“Vices of Distrust,” J. Adam Carter, University of Glasgow, UK and Daniella Meehan, University of Glasgow, UK
“Richly Trustworthy Allies,” William Tuckwell, University of Melbourne, AU
“The Trouble With ‘Fake News’,” David Coady, University of Tasmania, AU
“Algorithm-Based Illusions of Understanding,” Jeroen de Ridder, Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam, NL
“Is Conspiracy Theorising Irrational?” Neil Levy, Macquarie University, AU, and University of Oxford, UK
“So What if ‘Fake News’ is Fake News?” Jeroen de Ridder, Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam, NL
“What Evolutionary Biology Can Tell Us About Cooperation (and Trust) in Online Networks,” Toby Handfield, Monash University, AU
“What Rationality? A Comment on Levy’s ‘Is Conspiracy Theorising Irrational?’” Stephan Lewandowsky, University of Bristol, UK, and University of Western Australia, AU, Anastasia Kozyreva, Max-Planck Insitute for Human Development, DE, and James Ladyman, University of Bristol, UK
“When Is it Right to be Wrong? A Response to Lewandowsky, Kozyreva and Ladyman,” Neil Levy, Macquarie University, AU, and University of Oxford, UK
“Intellectual Vice and Social Networks?” Cailin O’Connor, University of California, Irvine, US
Mark Alfano. Cambridge University Press (2013).