Information Culture
Scientific knowledge is framed as provisional and open to revision. Anger is described as increasing media virality. The article links personal well-being to the culture of information consumption. The article says media systems reward pol…
1 sources - 6 claims
Scientific knowledge is framed as provisional and open to revision. Anger is described as increasing media virality. The article links personal well-being to the culture of information consumption. The article says media systems reward polarizing, anger-inducing content. The article criticizes the term misinformation when it presumes intent or intelligence. The article encourages exposure to ideologically different viewpoints as a practice for empathy and avoiding echo chambers.