Table of Contents
Volume 1: Metaphysics and EpistemologyIntroduction, Michael Brownstein and Jennifer SaulSection One: The Nature of Implicit Attitudes, Implicit Bias, and Stereotype Threat1.1. Playing Double: Implicit Bias, Dual Levels, and Self-Control, Keith Frankish1.2. Implicit Bias, Reinforcement Learning, and Scaffolded Moral Cognition, Bryce Huebner1.3. e Heterogeneity of Implicit Bias, Jules Holroyd and Joseph Sweetman1.4. DeFreuding Implicit Attitudes, Edouard Machery1.5. Stereotype Threat and Persons, Ron MallonSection Two: Skepticism, Social Knowledge, and Rationality2.1. Bias: Friend or Foe? Reflections on Saulish Skepticism, Louise M. Antony2.2. Virtue, Social Knowledge, and Implicit Bias, Alex Madva2.3. Stereotype Threat, Epistemic Injustice, and Rationality, Stacey Goguen2.4. The Status Quo Fallacy: Implicit Bias and Fallacies of Argumentation, Catherine E. Hundleby2.5. Revisiting Current Causes of Women's Underrepresentation in Science, Carole J. Lee2.6. Philosophers explicitly associate philosophy with maleness: an examination of implicit and explicit gender stereotypes in philosophy, Laura di Bella, Eleanor Miles and Jennifer SaulVolume 2: Moral Responsibility, Structural Injustice, and EthicsIntroduction, Michael Brownstein and Jennifer SaulSection One: Moral Responsibility for Implicit Bias1.1. Whose Responsible for This? Moral Responsibility, Externalism, and Knowledge about Implicit Bias, Natalia Washington and Daniel Kelly1.2. Alienation and Responsibility, Joshua Glasgow1.3. Attributablity, Accountability, and Implicit Attitudes, Robin Zheng1.4. Stereotypes and Prejudice: Whose Responsibility? Indirect Personal Responsibility for Implicit Bias, Maureen Sie and Nicole van Voorst Vader-Bours1.5. Revisionism and Moral Responsibility, Luc FaucherSection Two: Structural Injustice2.1. The Too Minimal Political, Moral, and Civil Dimension of Claude Steele's 'Stereotype Threat' Paradigm, Lawrence Blum2.2. Reducing Bias: Attitudinal and Institutional Change, Anne JacobsonSection Three: The Ethics of Implicit Bias: Theory and Practice3.1. A Virtue Ethics Response to Implicit Bias, Clea F. Rees3.2. Implicit Bias, Context, and Character, Michael Brownstein3.3. The Moral Status of Micro-Inequities: In Favour of Institutional Solutions, Samantha Brennan3.4. Discrimination Law, Equity Law, and Implicit Bias, Katya Hosking and Roseanne Russell