Yale Philosophy Professor Hosts Seminar for “KME” Philosophy Students
In the High School philosophy elective, “Knowledge, Mind, & Existence,” students participated in a workshop with Dr. Lily Hu, Assistant Professor of Philosophy at Yale University, to discuss her work concerning causal inference methodologies in the social sciences, machine learning theory, and algorithmic fairness.
Students explored how various statistical frameworks treat and measure the “causal effect” of social categories such as race, and ultimately, how such methods are seen to back normative claims about racial discrimination and inequalities broadly. In addition to reading Hu’s work, students listened to a recent NPR interview Professor Hu did, where she was asked about the troubling resurgence on TikTok and Instagram of some of the ideas and methods that undergirded 19th-century “scientific” disciplines like phrenology and physiognomy. From "witch skulls and angel skulls," to the skull geometry of so-called “transvestigations,” to the question of whether AI can detect gay faces — Professor Hu asked why it seems like more and more people want to categorize each other with just a look at their heads.
Story submitted by HS History Teacher Donald Okpalugo