Would you rather have 10,000 followers on LinkedIn, or 500 email subscribers?| BK Authors
Can Artificial Intelligence (AI) be an author? A common reason cited against AI authorship is that AI is not a person. This article argues that the lack of personhood, in itself, does not disqualify AI as an author. Why not? Because we already detach personhood from authorship for many reasons, such as with pseudonyms, heteronyms, … Continue reading AI can be an author without being a person→| Advait Sarkar
Did you know that there are actually guidelines for determining authorship on scientific papers?| Total Internal Reflection
The material in this article was graciously provided by Peter Winick and his company, Thought Leadership Leverage. See the full ROI report here.| BK Authors
One of the most common questions I am asked, and that I hear being discussed in doctoral and ECR support groups, is whether to write with supervisors and former supervisors. Or most often, I read o…| patter
Michael Kok’s book The Gospel on the Margins (Fortress Press, 2015) is the publication of the author’s PhD dissertation from the University of Sheffield. Opening with a consideration of the relative obscurity of the gospel of Mark in the first centuries of Christianity, Kok develops an intriguing thesis of the origin of the patristic tradition: the gospel is not in fact Mark’s collection of the memoirs of Peter but rather an anonymous first-century text whose apostolicity was asserted b...| Think Christian Theism
Acts 4:13 and the Authorship of the Fourth Gospel| Think Christian Theism
Siri Hustvedt’s latest work The Blazing World (2014) is a complex and multi-layered novel that deals with the notion of authorship in the art world. The novel shows an intricate play with the concept of authorship and highlights in particular a form of authorship that is rather restrictive. The fictional author/creator constructs an aesthetic experience … Locked Up: Siri Hustvedt’s ‘The Blazing World’ Read More » The post Locked Up: Siri Hustvedt’s ‘The Blazing World’ first a...| Notes on Metamodernism
The case recently brought against OpenAI by the New York Times is the latest in a series of legal actions involving AI in the United States, and mirrored in other countries –notably, the UK. In order to train their technologies, should AI companies be allowed to use works under copyright protection without consent? The lawsuits... Continue reading| Kluwer Copyright Blog
This short analysis focuses on female scientists as a subgroup of a large survey sample and how their assessment of public engagement differs from that of their male counterparts.| Elephant in the Lab
A collaborative digital research project| Glenn Roe