In today’s digital world, we are constantly bombarded with information — some of it helpful, much of it misleading. This course explores how we, as digital epistemic subjects, can navigate complex online environments shaped by fake news, conspiracy theories, echo chambers, and shifting norms of trust and mistrust. You'll begin by examining the major epistemic challenges of the digital age, including the impact of online storage and information overload. Next, you'll explore two crucial problems: cognitive offloading — our growing dependence on digital tools for knowledge — and digital skepticism, which questions the reliability of online information sources.

Introduction to Digital Epistemology

Introduction to Digital Epistemology

Instructor: J Adam Carter, Professor of Philosophy
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Gain insight into a topic and learn the fundamentals.
Intermediate level
Recommended experience
1 week to complete
at 10 hours a week
Flexible schedule
Learn at your own pace
What you'll learn
Understand the basic issues underlying the current debate about digital technology and its significance for the theory of knowledge.
Question the seriousness of the epistemic consequences of deep fakes.
Understand why philosophers are raising questions about LLMs and how their linguistic performance poses difficult questions for the epistemologist.
Skills you'll gain
Details to know

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Assessments
4 assignments
Taught in English
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There are 4 modules in this course
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