| ID | 
        
864
 | 
    
    
        | Authors | 
        
 FIGÀ TALAMANCA Giacomo
 | 
    
    
        | Title | 
        
Frameless Folk Psychology
 | 
    
    
        | Title (translation) | 
        
 | 
    
    
        | Subtitle | 
        
How Online Context Collapse and User-Centeredness Distort Social Cognition and Nudge Hostility and Epistemic Injustice
 | 
    
    
        | Subtitle (translation) | 
        
 | 
    
    
        | Keywords | 
        
online hostility, social networking sites, social cognition, epistemic injustice, reactive attitudes
 | 
    
    
        | Keywords (translation) | 
        
 | 
    
    
        | Issue | 
        
2023/2
 | 
    
    
        | DOI | 
        
https://doi.org/10.22503/inftars.XXIII.2023.2.8
 | 
    
    
        | Abstract | 
        
In this paper, I will argue that the rise in hostility and polarization on social media is explainable by taking into account a radical difference between online and face-toface interaction. In everyday offline environments, socially shared and context-dependent norms frame the understanding of other people’s minds based on their behavior. I will argue that, on social media platforms, social cognition is distorted thanks to two deliberate design choices that are a means for financial gain for the platform’s designers: namely, the lack of socially shared norms on these platforms (entailed by what is known as context collapse) and their interfaces’ extreme user- centeredness. I will argue that such design features not only cause frustration in the understanding of others but encourage testimonial injustice in interaction.
 | 
    
    
        | Abstract (translation) | 
        
 | 
    
    
        | Language | 
        
English
 | 
    
    
        | Pages | 
        
128-145
 | 
    
    
        | Column | 
        
 |