Gabrielle Johnson is an Assistant Professor of Philosophy at Claremont McKenna College. Before joining CMC, she was a Bersoff Faculty Fellow at NYU, affiliated with the Center for Mind, Brain, and Consciousness. She works primarily in philosophy of psychology, philosophy of cognitive science, philosophy of science, and philosophy of technology. Her projects explore the nature and structure of social bias as it occurs in computational systems, including the visual perceptual system, socio-cognitive systems, scientific inference, and predictive models in machine learning programs.
Gabbrielle Johnson
Assistant Professor, Philosophy, Claremont McKenna College
Participant In These Roundtable Discussions
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Sep 26th
2020
Sep 26th
2020
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Ethics & AI
Justice is blind, the saying goes, which means that a person’s particulars – their social status, race, gender, etc. – should have no bearing on fair judgement in any legal dispute. By this standard, we are all considered equal before the law. In A Theory of Justice, the philosopher John Rawls proposed the following thought experiment:... read more! »