圣诞老人、社交和秘密:知识权利的艰难案例

Étienne Brown, Rebecca Chan
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引用次数: 0

摘要

在《知情权》一书中,拉尼·沃森有力地论证了承认所有人的知识权利。在本文中,我们将沃森的框架应用于三个困难的案例。首先,我们考虑了人际关系,并建议存在探索认知权利如何影响的空间,例如,父母是否可以通过断言圣诞老人的存在而对孩子撒谎或误导他们。其次,我们转向社交媒体平台,认为沃森的框架与对比缓和政策和透明度要求是兼容的。第三,我们考察了法律伦理的一个基本案例——被埋葬的尸体案例——它提出了一个问题,即如何将职业和道德责任与沃森的认识论责任相提并论。在探索这些案例的过程中,我们希望能激发有实践头脑的哲学家反思沃森理论对当代应用伦理学和政治哲学辩论的影响。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Santa, socials, and secrets: hard cases for epistemic rights

In The Right to Know, Lani Watson forcefully argues in favor of recognizing epistemic rights to all humans. In this paper, we apply Watson’s framework to three hard cases. First, we consider interpersonal relationships and suggest that there is room to explore how epistemic rights bear on, e.g., whether parents can permissibly lie to or mislead their children by asserting the existence of Santa Claus. Second, we turn to social media platforms and contend that Watson’s framework is compatible with contrasting moderation policies and transparency requirements. Third, we examine a foundational case of legal ethics—the buried bodies case—which raises the question of how professional and moral duties might be weighed alongside Watson’s epistemic ones. In exploring these cases, we hope to incite practically minded philosophers to reflect upon the implications of Watson’s theory for contemporary debates in applied ethics and political philosophy.

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