(I am also a human being)
Language Origins // AI Ethics // Autism
doi.org/10.1007/s112...
doi.org/10.1007/s112...
(D6) But many philosophical engagements with autism still lack critical reflection—they rely on unexamined assumptions.
(D7) Even when well-meaning, philosophers often reinforce negative stereotypes about autism—framing it as defective, pathological, or less-than-human.
(D6) But many philosophical engagements with autism still lack critical reflection—they rely on unexamined assumptions.
(D7) Even when well-meaning, philosophers often reinforce negative stereotypes about autism—framing it as defective, pathological, or less-than-human.
(D4) There’s been a notable rise in philosophical work on autism over the past decade.
(D5) This newer work is also more nuanced and sympathetic to autistic perspectives.
(D4) There’s been a notable rise in philosophical work on autism over the past decade.
(D5) This newer work is also more nuanced and sympathetic to autistic perspectives.
(D1) There’s surprisingly little philosophical engagement with autism.
(D2) What exists tends to focus narrowly on ethics, mind, psychology, or medicine.
(D3) So, If autism is (or should be) its own subfield in philosophy, it’s currently underdeveloped.
(D1) There’s surprisingly little philosophical engagement with autism.
(D2) What exists tends to focus narrowly on ethics, mind, psychology, or medicine.
(D3) So, If autism is (or should be) its own subfield in philosophy, it’s currently underdeveloped.
broadviewpress.com/product/arti...
broadviewpress.com/product/arti...
doi.org/10.1007/s436...
doi.org/10.1007/s436...
The value alignment problem is neither technical nor normative; it is fundamentally social.
The value alignment problem is neither technical nor normative; it is fundamentally social.