John M. Drake
@jdrakephd.bsky.social
Professor of Ecology at the University of Georgia. Views are my own.
http://daphnia.ecology.uga.edu/drakelab/
http://daphnia.ecology.uga.edu/drakelab/
Also: are there essays or papers you’ve found especially insightful on the ethics of AI in scholarly writing?
September 8, 2025 at 2:10 PM
Also: are there essays or papers you’ve found especially insightful on the ethics of AI in scholarly writing?
Three prompts:
(1) What tasks might AI be used for?
(2) What are the norms of academic writing that AI could reinforce, violate, or unsettle?
(3) What ethical challenges/dilemmas deserve closer attention (e.g., equity of access, epistemic dependence, shifting standards of originality)?
(1) What tasks might AI be used for?
(2) What are the norms of academic writing that AI could reinforce, violate, or unsettle?
(3) What ethical challenges/dilemmas deserve closer attention (e.g., equity of access, epistemic dependence, shifting standards of originality)?
September 8, 2025 at 2:10 PM
Three prompts:
(1) What tasks might AI be used for?
(2) What are the norms of academic writing that AI could reinforce, violate, or unsettle?
(3) What ethical challenges/dilemmas deserve closer attention (e.g., equity of access, epistemic dependence, shifting standards of originality)?
(1) What tasks might AI be used for?
(2) What are the norms of academic writing that AI could reinforce, violate, or unsettle?
(3) What ethical challenges/dilemmas deserve closer attention (e.g., equity of access, epistemic dependence, shifting standards of originality)?