The heteronomy of algorithms: Traditional knowledge and computational knowledge
David M. Berry

TL;DR
This paper argues for the importance of developing critical digital literacy and interdisciplinary approaches to critique the pervasive influence of algorithms and computational systems on civil society and individual reasoning.
Contribution
It introduces the concept of digital Bildung and advocates for a critical interdisciplinary framework to analyze and challenge the epistemic and societal impacts of computational systems.
Findings
Need for new digital literacy skills for critique
Algorithms influence civil society and individual reasoning
Interdisciplinary research is essential for understanding computational impacts
Abstract
If an active citizen should increasingly be a computationally enlightened one, replacing the autonomy of reason with the heteronomy of algorithms, then I argue in this article that we must begin teaching the principles of critiquing the computal through new notions of what we might call digital Bildung. Indeed, if civil society itself is mediated by computational systems and media, the public use of reason must also be complemented by skills for negotiating and using these computal forms to articulate such critique. Not only is there a need to raise the intellectual tone regarding computation and its related softwarization processes, but there is an urgent need to attend to the likely epistemic challenges from computation which, as presently constituted, tends towards justification through a philosophy of utility rather than through a philosophy of care for the territory of the…
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