Events

Egenis seminar: AI, Worker Autonomy, and Science

Monday, 11 May 2026 at 15:15

with Dr Kate Vrendenburgh (London School of Economics)

Event details

An Egenis, the Centre for the Study of Life Sciences seminar.

What is autonomy at work? Philosophical accounts emphasize sovereignty or control over one’s work. We argue that sovereignty or control are insufficient in a world in which AI - especially AI agents - permeates the workplace. Workers who work with AI may have control while lacking what we call standing: the position from which one can author work decisions and answer for them. We develop this account through ameliorative conceptual analysis, asking what concept of work autonomy best serves the normative purposes that make autonomy worth caring about. Standing, we argue, comprises two interconnected elements: authorship and answerability. Our analysis is informed by 100 qualitative interviews with IT professionals and data scientists whose work is already transformed by AI. This empirical grounding helps us identify the normative interests of workers under threat as AI agents enter the workplace. We then defend the relevance of this account for normative theorizing about the use of AI in science. The permissibility and desirability of using AI in science should not only be judged by its generation of epistemic goods, or its creation of downstream harms and benefits. Scientists too have an interest in remaining the authors of their work, and answerable for it.

Online: via Zoom

Free to attend. Please register here

Organiser

Egenis, Centre for the Study of Life Sciences

Location

Byrne House, Streatham Campus