The Internet of Us

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The Internet of Us Page 19

by Michael P. Lynch


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  Index

  Page numbers listed correspond to the print edition of this book. You can use your device’s search function to locate particular terms in the text.

  Page numbers in italics refer to illustrations. Page numbers beginning with 191 refer to endnotes.

  Academia.edu, 135

  accuracy, 14, 27–31, 39–40, 44–45, 130

  of data searches, 163

  sacrificed for a “noble lie,” 78–80, 82

  Achilles, 13

  actionable information, defined, 14

  Affordable Care Act, 122–23

  Afghanistan War, 137

  Agarwal, Anant, 150

  Agony and the Ecstasy of Steve Jobs, The, 77

  “aha” moments, 175, 176

  AIDS, 198

  airport body scans, 108, 109

  Alexandria, library of, 8

  Amazing Stories, 41

  Amazon, 9, 80–81, 136, 141

  tracking by, 90, 97, 105

  Amherst University, 152

  Anderson, Chris, 156–60, 182

  “animal” knowledge, 131

  answer “cards,” 66

  AnswersinGenesis.org, 48

  anterograde amnesia, 168–69

  Apple, 77

  a priori beliefs, 47

  Arabic language, 81

  Arab Spring, 66

  architecture, as analogy for structure of knowledge, 126–28

  “Are We Living in a Computer Simulation?” (Bostrom), 193

  Aristotle, 171

  artificial intelligence (AI), 116, 176

  assassinations, 83

  assumptions, in data analysis, 162

  attractive nuisances, 98

  authority:

  appeals to, 60–61

  in educational models, 151

  evaluation of, 62

  questioning of, 34, 61–62

  trust in, 34

  automobiles, information technology compared to, xvii–xviii, 11–12, 180

  autonomy:

  of decision, 102–4

  democratic respect for, 58, 59–63, 101–7

  privacy and, 89–109

  of thought, 33–34, 39, 63, 147–48

  threat to, 4, 102–7, 147, 187

  Bacon, Francis, 9

  Barnes and Noble, 9

  BCIs, 191–92

  Beck, Harry, 112–13

  beliefs:

  anchoring of, 131–32

  architecture of, 126–27, 129–30

  assuming responsibility for, 6

  capacity for change of, 53–54

  collective, 117–18, 200

  democratic encouragement of diverse, 60–61

  faith-based, 47–48

  justification for, 14–16, 128–32, 148

  networks of, 128–32

  private vs. public, 60–61

  as receptive states of mind, 27

  reinforcement of one’s own, 7, 43, 45–46, 49–50, 51–52, 54–55, 56, 61, 63; see also confirmation bias

  socially embedded, 116

  undesired, 198

  Bentham, Jeremy, 91, 92, 97

  Berkeley, George, 68–69

  Berlin Monthly, 58

  Bible, 48, 49, 61, 66

  big data:

  analysis in, see data analysis, data analytics

  definitions of, 8–9, 156

  in digital form of life, 155–78

  hyperconnectivity of, 184–88

  limitations of, 183

  mining of, see data mining

  participants in, 111–32

  political economy of knowledge in, 133–54

  privacy and autonomy issues of, 89–109

  Big Data: A Revolution That Will Transform How We Live, Work, and Think (Mayer-Schönberger and Cukier), 8

  “big data hubris,” 183

  big knowledge, 155–63

  “big man” theory, 162

  Big Oil, 9

  Bing, 30

  blogs, blogosphere, 8, 24, 55, 65, 113, 118

  Bloom, Paul, 54

  Bloustein, Edward J., 101–2

  Boden, Margaret, 176

  Borges, Jorge Luis, 17, 44

  Boston Marathon bombing, 31

  Bostrom, Nick, 20, 193

  bots, see socialbots

  Brabham, Daren, 136, 142

  Brain in the Vat thought experiment, 18–20

  brain-to-brain communication, 192

  brainwashing, 102

  Brandeis, Louis, 89–90, 94, 101

  Brin, Sergey, 186

  British Petroleum, 118

  British Royal Society, 34

  Bruner, J. S., 159–60

  Bush, George W., advisor to, 86

  calculators, 153

  Caldarelli, Guido, 112

  cameras, 89, 94

 
; security, 91, 97

  Cancer Ward (Solzhenitsyn), 185

  capitalism, changes in, 140–41, 144

  Cartesian coordinates, 175

  Cartesian foundationalism, 126–29, 131

  Catanzaro, Michele, 112

  Cavell, Stanley, 10

  CCTV, 91

  CD-ROMs, 8

  censorship, 42, 65, 66, 134, 144

  self-, 97

  Chabris, Christopher, 30

  Chalmers, David, 115

  chat rooms, 118

  chess, 165

  children:

  and hands-on experience, 174

  understanding in, 177

  China:

  iPhone production in, 77–78, 139

  oppressive government policies of, 81

  truth deleted from Internet in, 65, 66

  Chuck, 167–68, 173

  Church, power held by, 133–34

  CIA, 100

  data searched by, 99

  Clark, Andy, 115

  climate change, 56, 100, 124, 144, 185, 198

  cloud:

  data storage on, 23

  data trail on, 9

  in information sharing, 4–5

  coherentism, 130

  see also fabric metaphor, for structure of beliefs

  Collaborative Commons, 140–41

  educational model of, 151–52

  as first world resource, 144

  collective responsibility, 118–19

  College Humor (website), 24

  common point of view, 48

  communication:

  isolation and, 41–42

  neuromedia and, 113–14

  of standards, 39–40

  computers, xvii

  brains and, 19

  games, 19–20, 191

  reality simulated in, see SIMs

  self-awareness in, 116, 193

  Concept of Mind, The (Ryle), 168

  conclusions, jumping to, 29–30, 58

  Condorcet Jury Theorum, 120–21

  confirmation bias, 54–55, 56

  defined, 51–52

  Congress, U.S., NSA vs., 99

  consequences, 172

  conservatives, 43

  context, in data analysis, 161

  continuum hypothesis, defined, 197

  “cookies,” tracking by, 90

  Copernicus, Nicolaus, 34

  corporate responsibility, 118

  corporations, as “people,” 200

  correlation analyses, 158–59

  Coursera, 150

  cover-ups, 83

  creationism, 49

  creativity:

  “impossible” aspect of, 176, 177

  knowledge and, xvii, 6, 180

  as personally relative, 176–77, 181–82

  in reaching understanding, 15–16, 174–77, 181, 183

  value and importance of, 183

  credibility, 40, 46, 50, 119–20

  and human rights, 147

  criminal justice system, identification techniques in, 93–95

  critical thinking:

  democratic institutional support for, 61–62

  importance of, 125

  knowledge through, 33–34

  crowdsourcing, 136–37, 141–42

  Cukier, Kenneth, 8, 158–59

  culture:

  form of life as, 10, 17–18

  video map of, 161–62

  cyborging, 5–6, 191–92

  Daedalus, 13

  D’Agata, John, 79–80

  Daily Kos, 43

  Daisey, Mike, 77–80, 82

  data, information vs., 12, 14

  data analysis, data analytics, 9, 90, 91, 155–63

  data maps, 160

  data mining, 90–91

  abuses of, 95–107

  commercial use of, 97, 105–6

  control and, 96

  incidental collection in, 95–96, 99, 199

  intention in, 96–98, 100

  data storage, 91, 95–96, 99–100, 108

  data trails, 9, 185

  dating sites, 157

  deception:

  justified, and relation to autonomy, 83

  truth and, 75–83

  decision making:

  autonomy in, 102–7

  overruling in, 102

  undermining in, 102–3

  Deepwater Horizon oil spill, responsibility for, 118

  dehumanization, 105

  democratization:

  capitalism vs., 141–42

  Internet as force for, 11, 49, 55–63, 125, 133–38, 148

  of public policy, 121

  Dennett, Daniel, 74

  dependency relationships, in understanding, 165–67, 177, 182

  dephysicalized objects, defined, 69

  Descartes, René, 19–20, 34, 39, 126–27, 129, 162, 174–76, 177

  Dewey, John, 151

  Dianetics, 61

  Dick, Philip K., 75

  dictionaries, 21–22

  digital form of life, xviii, 3–20

  as abstract and depersonalized, 41–50

  caveats about, 184–88

  as a construction, 70–74, 83–86, 187

  defined, 10

  limitations of, 16

  understanding in, 153–78

  see also Internet of Us

  digital groups, 118–19

  digital knowledge:

  caveats about, 184–88

  dependence on, xvi–xviii, 5, 12, 21–26, 31, 36, 179

  distribution of, 113

  education and, 148–54

  full and equal participation in, 146

  as interconnective, 184–88

  international access rates for, 135, 144–45

  massive proliferation of, 8, 11–12, 32, 56, 128

  network of, 111–32

  as power, 9, 98–99, 186

  ready accessibility of, 3–4, 23, 30, 42, 56, 113–16, 135–36, 141, 149, 153, 180

  speed of, 23, 29–30, 42, 135

  using alternative sources to, 21–23

  see also Google-knowing

  dinosaurs, 66

  discursive knowledge, 169

  “divided line” graph of knowledge, 126

  DNA identification techniques, 93–94

  Dreyfus, Hubert, 168, 171

  drugs:

  abilities changed by, 173

  SIM life compared to, 77

  Duke University, 152

  earthquakes, emotional epicenters of, 160–61

  eavesdropping, 101

  Ebola, 16

  economy, 111, 162

  as digitally dependent, 7–8, 9

  free-market, 145

  full and equal participation in, 146

  globalization of, 139, 142

  of knowledge, 138–45

  manufacturing in, 138–39

  prediction markets in, 122–23

  education:

  cheapening of, 152–53

  crisis in, 149–50

  as epistemic resource, 143, 145

  information technology and, 148–54

  old model of, 151–52

  U.S. hegemony in, 149

  education bubble, 149, 152

  education systems, 35–36

  edX, 150

  Einstein, Albert, 175, 177

  elections, 120–23

  emails, 81

  emotion, reasoning vs., 51–55

  “End of Theory, The: The Data Deluge Makes the Scientific Method Obsolete” (Anderson), 156–57

  Enlightenment, 33–34, 58–59

  environment:

  interacting with, 174

  receptive tracking of, 27–30, 131

  “environmental luck,” 203

  epilepsy, 168

  epistêmê, 14, 170, 172

  epistemic economy, 147–48

  epistemic equality, 138–48, 150, 187

  epistemic inclusivity, 135–36

  epistemic inequality, 142–48, 201

  epistemic injustice, 146–48, 201


  epistemic principles, 14, 47, 50, 55, 57, 60

  as democratic, 62, 135–36

  epistemic resources, 143–45

  epistemic trust, 195

  epistemology, defined, see epistemic principles

  Epistemology and Cognition (Goldman), 194

  Essay concerning Human Understanding, An (Locke), 35

  ethical values:

  changes in, 53–54

  democratic, 58

  and fragmentation, 44

  technology and, xvii, 6, 89–90

  “eureka” moment, 176, 177

  Eurocentrism, 162

  Euthyphro (Plato), 165–66, 172

  evangelicals, 47–49

  evidence, in change of belief, 54–55

  expectations:

  in changing of social constructs, 72–73

  conclusions colored by, 29–30, 160

  theoretical, 159

  of truth, 79–80

  experience:

  as foundation for knowledge, 127, 131

  in hands-on movements, 173–74

  illusion and reality in, 18–19

  procedural knowledge in, 172–73

  understanding through, 16, 173–74

  experts, expertise:

  knowledge based on, 15, 35–38, 120, 139–40

  outsourcing of, 141–42

  in predicting, 122–23

  in problem solving, 137

  understanding and, 170–71

  explanation, 165–67, 182

  extended mind hypothesis, 115

  fabric metaphor, for structure of beliefs, 129

  Facebook, xvii, 8, 24, 43, 72, 124

  hegemony of, 146

  as simulacrum, 16

  tracking by, 105

  fact-checking, 46–47, 56, 85, 130

  falsehoods, 77–83

  “fast thinking” processes, 29–30

  FBI, data searched by, 99

  fiction, 79–80

  fingerprints, 93

  FISA, see Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act

  fishbowls, digital life compared to, 91

  Fishburne, Laurence, 18–19

  Flanagan, Owen, 73–74

  Floridi, Luciano, 10, 69–71

  Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA; 1978), 88

  court of, 99, 109

  form of life:

  defined, 10

  philosophy in, 17–18

  Forms (Platonic), 126

  foundationalism, Cartesian, 126–29, 131

  Fox News, 43

  fragmentation:

  of reason, 148

  threat of, 4, 41–63

  Freebase, 151

  freedom of choice, autonomy of decision vs., 102

  French Revolution, 58

  Freud, Sigmund, 184

  Fricker, Miranda, 146–48, 201

  Galileo, 34, 68

  Galton, Francis, 120

  games, gaming, 20, 191

  gatekeeping, 128, 134, 146

  gender, 162

  in marriage, 53–54, 72

  in problem solving, 137

  Georgetown University, 77–78

  Gilbert, Margaret, 117–19, 200

 

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