The Ethics of Extended Cognition: Is Having Your Computer Compromised a Personal Assault?

September 22, 2016 in Ethical Considerations, Extended Mind and Epistemology, New Research, News, Uncategorized by Orestis Palermos

New project output by Adam Carter and Orestis Palermos in the Journal of the American Philosophical Association: The Ethics of Extended Cognition: Is Having Your Computer Compromised a Personal Assault? Abstract: Philosophy of mind and
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Augmented Skepticism: The Epistemological Design of Augmented Reality

September 22, 2016 in Ethical Considerations, Extended Mind and Epistemology, New Research, Uncategorized by Orestis Palermos

New project output by Orestis Palermos to appear in Augmented Reality. Reflections on its Contribution to Knowledge Formation, José María Ariso (ed), 2017, De Gruyter (series: Berlin Studies in Knowledge
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Extended Knowledge Project Impact Event

December 7, 2015 in Ethical Considerations, Extended Mind and Epistemology, New Research, News, Uncategorized by Orestis Palermos

On January 28, 2016, we are holding an impact event for the recently completed Extended Knowledge Project. The aim of the event is to demonstrate how conceiving of knowledge as extended
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To Google, or Not to Google, During Exams, by Orestis Palermos and Duncan Pritchard

June 6, 2015 in Ethical Considerations, Extended Mind and Epistemology, New Research, News, Uncategorized by Orestis Palermos

Mark Dawe, Chief Executive of the OCR exam board, has recently claimed that students should be allowed to use Google during GCSE and A-level exams. Predictably, this intervention met with
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The Ethics of Extended Cognition: Is having your computer compromised a personal assault?

January 5, 2015 in Ethical Considerations, New Research, News, Uncategorized by Orestis Palermos

Adam Carter and Orestis Palermos recently gave a talk about the ethical and legal ramifications of extended cognition at the 2014 IT Futures Conference, University of Edinburgh. Abstract: According to
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New Eidyn Research Project

February 28, 2014 in Ethical Considerations, Extended Mind and Epistemology, New Research, News, Uncategorized by Orestis Palermos

Duncan Pritchard and Jesper Kallestrup were recently awarded by the John Templeton Foundation £100K in total for their project on ‘Virtue Epistemology, Epistemic Dependence and intellectual Humility’. Project Summary Virtue epistemology
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Government recognised cyborg and the first cybernetic hate crime

December 4, 2013 in Ethical Considerations, News, Uncategorized by Orestis Palermos

The links below will take you to the stories of Neil Harbisson, “the first person on the planet to have a passport photo that shows his cyborg nature”, and Steve
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by admin

A song about the extended mind

February 1, 2013 in Ethical Considerations, Uncategorized by admin

The Magnetic Fields – The Machine in Your Hand (Click on the above link to listen to the song. The song is called ‘The Machine in Your Hand’ from ‘Love
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