Dear all,
we warmly invite you to the next APSE (Applied Philosophy of Science and 
Epistemology) Reading Circle. The talk will be held by Natalie Alana 
Ashton (University of Sterling).
When: Thursday, 27.3.2025, 15:00 - 17:00
Where: HS 3A, NIG (Universitätsstraße 7, 1010 Wien)
Creating a Strong Foundation for Neurodiverse Epistemology
Autistic people have had unprecedented success building effective 
epistemic communities online. A detailed analysis of the conditions and 
practices which produced and sustain these communities would be 
illuminating for both the epistemology of social media and the emerging 
area of neurodiverse epistemology. However, epistemology has only 
recently begun to theorise about marginalised groups, and many of its 
foundational principles are ill-suited to this work.  In this talk I'll 
outline a planned project to develop a novel approach to neurodiverse 
epistemology, which challenges some of the fundamental assumptions of 
the early, exploratory literature, and lays the groundwork for a 
participatory methodology which can do real justice to neurodiverse 
communities.
Speaker Bio:
Natalie Alana Ashton works on the political and social aspects of 
epistemology, and is interested in how oppression and power effect 
political deliberation in the online sphere. In the past she has focused 
on theoretical issues (exploring how to integrate feminist standpoint 
theory and hinge epistemology, whether these views should be understood 
as relativist, and what that means). Her current work is on the 
practical applications of such views: what they tell us about social 
media legislation, platform design, and online communities.
Reading Circle (1-3 PM):
We will focus our discussion on an article by Natalie Ashton and a few 
pages of an interim project report (attached pdf):
Ashton, N.A. (2020). Scientific Perspectives, Feminist Standpoints, and 
Non-Silly Relativism. In: Crețu, AM., Massimi, M. (eds) Knowledge from a 
Human Point of View. Synthese Library, vol 416. Springer, Cham. 
https://doi-org.uaccess.univie.ac.at/10.1007/978-3-030-27041-4_5
Shaping Democracy in the Digital Age: Interim report of the 'Norms for 
the New Public Sphere' project. (Pages 3-6 and 20-22)
Link: 
https://newpublicsphere.stir.ac.uk/wp-content/uploads/2021/12/NNPS-Report-F…
As introduction to Natalie Ashtons approach, we suggest this short 
article:
Ashton, N.A. (2021). Why Twitter is (Epistemically) Better Than 
Facebook. _Open For Debate. _Link: 
https://blogs.cardiff.ac.uk/openfordebate/why-twitter-is-epistemically-bett…
As introduction to definitions of Neurodiversity, we suggest the 
introduction of this book:
Chapman, R. (2023). _Empire of Normality: Neurodiversity and Capitalism_ 
(1st ed.). Pluto Press. 
https://doi.org/10.2307/jj.8501594
For further reading regarding the topic:
Medina, J. (2013). _The epistemology of resistance : gender and racial 
oppression, epistemic injustice, and resistant imaginations_. Oxford 
University Press.
Ashton, N. (2019). Relativising epistemic advantage. In _The Routledge 
Handbook of Philosophy of Relativism_ (pp. 329-338). Routledge.
Anderson, E. (1995). Feminist Epistemology: An Interpretation and a 
Defense. _Hypatia_, _10_(3), 50-84. 
doi:10.1111/j.1527-2001.1995.tb00737.x
Please send a quick message to vinzenz.fischer(a)univie.ac.at if you are 
planning to attend the Reading Cycle!
Feel free to bring your lunch!
Feel free to share this invitation with anyone who might be interested!
Best wishes,
Vinzenz Fischer