Big Data: A New Empiricism and its Epistemic and Socio-Political Consequences

Abstract

The paper investigates the rise of Big Data in contemporary society. It examines the most prominent epistemological claims made by Big Data proponents, calls attention to the potential socio-political consequences of blind data trust, and proposes a possible way forward. The paper’s main focus is on the interplay between an emerging new empiricism and an increasingly opaque algorithmic environment that challenges democratic demands for transparency and accountability. It concludes that a responsible culture of quantification requires epistemic vigilance as well as a greater awareness of the potential dangers and pitfalls of an ever more data-driven society.

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Predictive privacy: towards an applied ethics of data analytics.Rainer Mühlhoff - 2021 - Ethics and Information Technology 23 (4):675-690.

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