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Epistemic Injustice

open access: yesAlgemeen Nederlands Tijdschrift voor Wijsbegeerte, 2020
S. Wallaert
semanticscholar   +2 more sources
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Epistemic Neural Networks

Neural Information Processing Systems, 2021
Intelligence relies on an agent's knowledge of what it does not know. This capability can be assessed based on the quality of joint predictions of labels across multiple inputs. In principle, ensemble-based approaches produce effective joint predictions,
Ian Osband   +5 more
semanticscholar   +1 more source

Epistemic Determiners

Journal of Semantics, 2006
The present paper offers a contrastive examination of French items that require some knowledge of the speaker and items that require some ignorance. We relate this difference in a systematic way to the well?known problem of ?identifiability'in epistemic logic.
Jayez, Jacques, Tovena, Lucia
openaire   +1 more source

The Deontological Conception of Epistemic Justification

Arguing About Knowledge, 2020
The terms, 'justified', 'justification', and their cognates are most naturally understood in what we may term a "deontological" way, as having to do with obligation, permission, requirement, blame, and the like.
W. Alston
semanticscholar   +1 more source

Epistemic Injustice and Epistemic Trust

Social Epistemology, 2012
Miranda Fricker has introduced the insightful notion of epistemic injustice in the philosophical debate, thus bridging concerns of social epistemology with questions that arise in the area of social and cultural studies. I concentrate my analysis of her treatment of testimonial injustice. According to Fricker, the central cases of testimonial injustice
openaire   +1 more source

"I am just terrified of my future" — Epistemic Violence in Disability Related Technology Research

CHI Extended Abstracts, 2020
Technology for disabled people is often developed by non-disabled populations, producing an environment where the perspectives of disabled researchers - particularly when they clash with normative ways of approaching accessible technology - are ...
A. Ymous   +6 more
semanticscholar   +1 more source

Epistemic Desiderata and Epistemic Pluralism

Journal of Philosophical Research, 2010
In this article I argue that Alston's recent meta-epistemological approach in terms of epistemic desiderata is not as epistemically plural as he claims it to be. After some preliminary remarks, I briefly recapitulate Alston's epistemic desiderata approach.
openaire   +2 more sources

The cognitive empire, politics of knowledge and African intellectual productions: reflections on struggles for epistemic freedom and resurgence of decolonisation in the twenty-first century

, 2020
What has been the contribution of African intellectuals to postcolonial and decolonial scholarship? This question arises because there is emphasis on privileging works of Diasporic scholars from the Middle East and South Asia for postcolonialism and ...
S. Ndlovu-Gatsheni
semanticscholar   +1 more source

The Epistemic and the Zetetic

Philosophical Review, 2020
Call the norms of inquiry zetetic norms. How are zetetic norms related to epistemic norms? At first glance, they seem quite closely connected. Aren't epistemic norms norms that bind inquirers qua inquirers?
Jane Friedman
semanticscholar   +1 more source

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