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  "path": "/2026/05/12/the-market-for-scholar-replicas/",
  "publishedAt": "2026-05-12T13:41:38.000Z",
  "site": "https://dailynous.com",
  "tags": [
    "Philosophy Job Market",
    "academic labor",
    "artificial intelligence",
    "job market",
    "technology",
    "The Market for Scholar Replicas",
    "Daily Nous"
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  "textContent": "Why should a department hire some fresh PhD when it could instead hire Derek Parfit, Daniel Dennett, Judy Thomson, Hilary Putnam, Ruth Barcan Marcus, or David Lewis? You might say: “How could a department hire these people? They’re dead!” True. But it is only a matter of time before AI-based “replicas” of them exist. Imagine a sophisticated, well-trained language model paired with some video or holographic technology, and you get the idea. Instead of hiring a person, a department could purchase a subscription to some corporation’s AI replica of a well-known scholar. Think of the savings! Such replicas have been in development for a while. Readers may recall Luciano Floridi‘s bot, described in a post here two years ago. It was trained on his works so that it could not only answer questions about what he says in them, but also offer suggestions as to what he might think about topics not covered in those works. There’s also a bot version of Peter Singer. Those are academic projects. Now, with AI-drafted ego-stroking pitches at the ready, come the corporate versions. Michael Smith (Princeton) shared an email he received from one company developing these replicas, called Shryn.ai. Dear Professor Smith, I’m the founder of Shryn.ai. We build conversational AI replicas of scholars—built with the scholar’s direct participation. Your book The Moral Problem at Blackwell—one of the most widely taught and debated works in meta-ethics of the past three decades—plus your McCosh Professorship of Philosophy at Princeton, your co-authored “Dispositional Theories of Value” with Mark Johnston and David Lewis, and your sustained body of work on moral motivation, the Humean theory of reasons, moral realism, and the nature of normativity. Here’s the use case that launched Shryn: graduate students who can’t always get time with their advisors, and who have their hardest questions at 2 AM. Your PhD students working on meta-ethics, philosophy of action, or normative ethics could test arguments against your framework whenever the thinking happens—ask why the moral problem (reconciling cognitivism, internalism, and the Humean theory of motivation) requires a distinctive solution rather than giving up one of the three claims, push back on whether your rationalist account of moral motivation can handle weakness of will, or explore what..\n\nThe post The Market for Scholar Replicas first appeared on Daily Nous.",
  "title": "The Market for Scholar Replicas"
}