CYAIOct 17, 2024

Lecture I: Governing the Algorithmic City

arXiv:2410.20720v12 citationsh-index: 1
Originality Synthesis-oriented
AI Analysis

This work addresses foundational challenges in political philosophy for society, offering a new model but is incremental in applying existing philosophical frameworks to modern technology.

The paper tackles the problem of political philosophy's outdated models in the face of algorithmically-mediated social relations, introducing the 'Algorithmic City' to analyze how algorithmic governance affects theories of authority, legitimacy, and neutrality.

A century ago, John Dewey observed that '[s]team and electricity have done more to alter the conditions under which men associate together than all the agencies which affected human relationships before our time'. In the last few decades, computing technologies have had a similar effect. Political philosophy's central task is to help us decide how to live together, by analysing our social relations, diagnosing their failings, and articulating ideals to guide their revision. But these profound social changes have left scarcely a dent in the model of social relations that (analytical) political philosophers assume. This essay aims to reverse that trend. It first builds a model of our novel social relations as they are now, and as they are likely to evolved, and then explores how those differences affect our theories of how to live together. I introduce the 'Algorithmic City', the network of algorithmically-mediated social relations, then characterise the intermediary power by which it is governed. I show how algorithmic governance raises new challenges for political philosophy concerning the justification of authority, the foundations of procedural legitimacy, and the possibility of justificatory neutrality.

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