Testimonial Epistemic Rights in Online Spaces

Kenneth Boyd
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Abstract

ABSTRACT:According to many theories of testimony, acts of testimony confer certain epistemic rights upon recipients, e.g., the right for the recipient to complain or otherwise hold the testifier responsible should the content of that testimony turn out to be false, and the right to "pass the epistemic buck", such that the recipient can redirect relevant challenges they may encounter back to the testifier. While these discussions do not explicitly exclude testimonial acts that occur online, they do not specifically address them, either. Here, then, I will ask the following questions: do the differences between communicating in online and offline spaces affect our testimonial epistemic rights, and if so, how? While there is no singular "online space", here I will focus on such spaces in which users communicate with one another, and in which communicated information can be vetted by other users (for example, social media). I argue that the characteristics of online testimony should make us think about testimonial epistemic rights differently, in two ways. First, whereas such rights have traditionally been conceived of as existing between the recipient and testifier, in many different types of online communication these rights exist between the recipient and a community. This is a result of the fact that online testimony is mediated, and in some cases partially determined by, a community of users. As such, testimonial epistemic rights in online spaces may be widely extended: while the original testifier still bears the brunt of responsibility for challenges, and is the primary buck-passee, all other members of the relevant community will also bear some such responsibilities. Second, the grounds of testimonial epistemic rights may differ in online spaces. Existing theories tend to ground such rights either in assurances provided by the testifier, or else norms that govern speech acts. I argue that testimony in online spaces should cause us to look to a third option, what I call norms of information sharing. The idea is that, given the highly social nature of online communication, a recipient acquires testimonial epistemic rights in virtue of having a reasonable expectation that information that is shared and vetted by the community meets certain standards. The grounds of online testimonial epistemic rights, then, is not primarily interpersonal or norms-based, but social.
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网络空间中的证言式认识论权利
ABSTRACT:根据许多证词理论,证词行为赋予接受者某些认识论权利,例如,如果证词内容被证明是虚假的,接受者有权投诉或以其他方式追究作证者的责任;接受者有权 "转嫁认识论责任",即接受者可以将他们可能遇到的相关质疑转嫁给作证者。虽然这些讨论没有明确排除发生在网上的作证行为,但也没有具体涉及这些行为。在此,我将提出以下问题:在线和离线空间交流的不同是否会影响我们的作证认识论权利?虽然不存在单一的 "在线空间",但在这里,我将重点关注用户相互交流的空间,以及交流的信息可由其他用户审核的空间(例如社交媒体)。我认为,在线证言的特点应使我们从两个方面对证言认识论权利进行不同的思考。首先,传统上人们认为这种权利存在于接受者和作证者之间,而在许多不同类型的在线交流中,这些权利存在于接受者和社区之间。这是因为在线证词是以用户群体为中介的,在某些情况下部分由用户群体决定。因此,在线空间中的证词认识论权利可能会被广泛扩展:尽管原始作证人仍然首当其冲地承担着质疑的责任,并且是主要的责任承担者,但相关社区的所有其他成员也会承担一些这样的责任。其次,在网络空间中,作证人认识论权利的依据可能有所不同。现有理论倾向于将这种权利建立在作证者提供的保证上,或者建立在规范言语行为的准则上。我认为,网络空间中的证词应促使我们寻求第三种选择,即我所说的信息共享规范。我的观点是,鉴于网络交流的高度社会性,接受者获得作证的认识论权利,是因为他们有合理的预期,即社区共享和审查的信息符合某些标准。因此,在线作证认识论权利的依据主要不是人际关系或规范,而是社会。
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