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3,717 documents 34 sections 47,686 citations 34,596+ keywords indexed 4 evidence tiers

232 results for "data ethics" — page 11 of 12

ZC_1_19 Credible Social Science

ZC_1_19 — Moral Psychology

Moral psychology — the scientific study of how humans develop, experience, and exercise moral judgment — has undergone a revolution since the early 2000s, shifting from Lawrence Kohlberg's rationalist stage theory (1958–

moral-psychology moral-foundations trolley-problem moral-intuition jonathan-haidt moral-development
ZD_3_00 Information & Computation

ZD_3_00 — Systems Architecture: Subfolder Summary

ZD_5_06 Verified Information & Computation

ZD_5_06 — Knowledge Representation: Ontologies, Semantic Web, and Knowledge Graphs

Knowledge representation (KR) is the field of artificial intelligence concerned with how to formally encode information about the world — facts, relationships, concepts, rules, and constraints — in formats that computer

knowledge representation ontology semantic web knowledge graph RDF OWL
ZD_5_10 Verified Information & Computation

ZD_5_10 — Information Retrieval: Search Engines, Ranking, and Vector Search

Information retrieval (IR) is the science of searching for information in a collection of documents, metadata, databases, or the World Wide Web — finding material (usually text documents) of an unstructured nature (usual

information retrieval search engine TF-IDF PageRank relevance ranking NLP
ZD_5_16 Credible Information & Computation

ZD_5_16 — Autonomous Weapons Systems

Autonomous weapons systems (AWS) — also termed lethal autonomous weapons systems (LAWS) — are weapon systems that can select and engage targets without meaningful human control. The debate over these weapons has become o

autonomous weapons lethal autonomous weapons systems LAWS killer robots Campaign to Stop Killer Robots CCW
ZD_5_00 Information & Computation

ZD_5_00 — Digital Culture Tools: Subfolder Summary

ZD_4_08 Verified Information & Computation

ZD_4_08 — Bioinformatics and Computational Biology

Bioinformatics — the application of computational methods to biological data, especially molecular sequences — has become indispensable to modern biology. The field emerged from the convergence of molecular biology's dat

bioinformatics computational biology sequence alignment BLAST genome assembly phylogenetics
ZD_2_17 Credible Information & Computation

ZD_2_17 — AI Alignment & Existential Risk

AI alignment — the challenge of ensuring artificial intelligence systems pursue goals consistent with human values and intentions — has emerged as one of the defining technical and philosophical problems of the 21st cent

AI alignment existential risk superintelligence value alignment instrumental convergence corrigibility
ZD_2_00 Information & Computation

ZD_2_00 — AI Machine Learning: Subfolder Summary

ZD_2_13 Verified Information & Computation

ZD_2_13 — Explainable AI: Interpretability, Trust, and the Black Box Problem

Explainable AI (XAI) is the field concerned with making artificial intelligence systems — particularly complex machine learning models — understandable to humans. As AI systems increasingly make or influence high-stakes

explainable AI XAI interpretability LIME SHAP black box
ZD_2_09 Verified Information & Computation

ZD_2_09 — Recommender Systems: Collaborative Filtering, Content-Based, and Hybrid Approaches

Recommender systems (RecSys) are algorithms and architectures that predict user preferences and suggest relevant items — products, movies, music, news articles, social media posts, job listings, potential partners — from

recommender systems collaborative filtering content-based filtering matrix factorization Netflix Prize personalization
L_4_00 Genetics & Origins

L_4_00 — Methods Ancient DNA: Subfolder Summary

P_3_13 Verified Philosophy & Meaning

P_3_13 — Kant: Transcendental Idealism and the Limits of Reason

Immanuel Kant (1724-1804), professor at the University of Königsberg in East Prussia, produced what is widely regarded as the most transformative body of work in modern Western philosophy. His three Critiques — the Criti

Kant Immanuel Kant transcendental idealism Critique of Pure Reason a priori synthetic a priori
P_0_00 Philosophy & Meaning

P_0_00 — Philosophy & Meaning: Section Summary

P_1_17 Credible Philosophy & Meaning

P_1_17 — Artificial Intelligence and the Consciousness Question

The question of whether artificial systems can possess consciousness — genuine subjective experience, phenomenal awareness, or "something it is like" to be that system (Thomas Nagel, 1974) — has moved from philosophical

artificial-intelligence machine-consciousness chinese-room hard-problem large-language-models sentience
P_2_06 Verified Philosophy & Meaning

P_2_06 — Political Philosophy: Justice, Power, and Authority

Political philosophy examines the nature of justice, power, authority, and the proper organization of collective human life. Plato (Republic, c. 375 BCE) argued that justice consists in each part of the soul and the city

political philosophy justice power authority legitimacy sovereignty
P_2_17 Verified Philosophy & Meaning

P_2_17 — Philosophy of Law: Jurisprudence and Legal Theory

Jurisprudence — the philosophical study of law's nature, authority, and relationship to morality — addresses foundational questions: What makes a rule a "law"? Is law necessarily connected to morality? How should judges

jurisprudence legal-positivism natural-law hartian dworkinian critical-legal-studies
ZE_4_11 Verified Ethics & Applied Philosophy

ZE_4_11 — Philosophy of Resistance: Civil Disobedience and Dissent

The philosophy of resistance — the ethical, political, and practical dimensions of civil disobedience, conscientious objection, nonviolent direct action, and revolutionary dissent — addresses one of the most fundamental

civil disobedience resistance dissent nonviolence Thoreau Gandhi
ZE_4_00 Ethics & Applied Philosophy

ZE_4_00 — Justice Rights Society: Subfolder Summary

ZE_1_07 Ethics & Applied Philosophy

ZE_1_07 — Social Contract Theory

Social contract theory holds that political authority and moral/political obligations are grounded in an agreement — actual or hypothetical — among individuals to form a society and accept governance. The theory addresse

social contract Hobbes Locke Rousseau Rawls state of nature