Course description
The course is structured into four parts:
1) The first part of the course provides an overview of current classificatory debates on ignorance in traditional, social, political, and feminist epistemology.
2) The second part of the course investigates normative dimensions of ignorance: When is ignorance repressive? Are there potential positive, liberating forms of ignorance?
3) The third part of the course addresses questions regarding ignorance, culpability, and responsibility: when are we culpable for our ignorance, and when are we not?
4) The fourth part of the course applies the previous three parts to specific cases of science scepticism and ignorance in social media environments.
Key questions:
– What is ignorance?
– What are the social and political dimensions of ignorance?
– Is ignorance always oppressive? If so, why? and if not, when not?
– Does ignorance have positive aspects/functions? Can ignorance fulfil liberating goals?
– When is an agent culpably ignorant of their actions, meaning when is ignorance itself blameworthy?
– How can we identify and combat complex cases of ignorance in science scepticism and social media deception?
Continue reading below for hour division and more.