Michael P. Lynch, Ph.D.

Board of Trustees Distinguished Professor of Philosophy University of Connecticut

  • Storrs CT

Dr. Lynch's research focuses on truth and fake news.

Contact

University of Connecticut

View more experts managed by University of Connecticut

Biography

Michael Patrick Lynch is a writer and professor of philosophy at the University of Connecticut. His work focuses on truth, democracy, and the ethics and epistemology of technology. He is the author or editor of numerous books, including In Praise of Reason: Why Rationality Matters for Democracy as well as Truth as One and Many and the New York Times Sunday Book Review Editor’s pick, True to Life.

The recipient of the Medal for Research Excellence from the University of Connecticut’s College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Lynch has held grants from the John Templeton Foundation, the National Endowment for the Humanities and the Bogliasco Foundation among others. A frequent contributor to the New York Times “The Stone” weblog, Lynch lectures widely, including at TEDx, Chautauqua, and South by Southwest. In 2013, he authored an amicus curiae brief on behalf of the ACLU’s federal case against the NSA.

Areas of Expertise

Information Technology and Knowledge
Democracy and Public Discourse
Fake News
Truth

Accomplishments

Medal for Research Excellence

Awarded by the University of Connecticut’s College of Liberal Arts and Sciences.

Social

Media Appearances

Be on the lookout for AI-generated photos after bill regulating use stalls

NBC Connecticut  tv

2024-05-22

Experts are warning voters to be on the lookout for misinformation being spread through artificial intelligence-generated images.

Few rules exist at the state or local level, and voters in other countries have been inundated with so-called deep-fakes as their election days have approached.

“Generative AI is great at making up things,” University of Connecticut Professor Michael Lynch said.

View More

Engaged in collaborative research? Try a touch of intellectual humility

Nature  online

2023-10-02

De la Peña’s approach embodies the concept of intellectual humility. According to the University of Connecticut’s Humility & Conviction in Public Life research project, which ran from 2015 to 2020, it involves “the owning of one’s cognitive limitations, a healthy recognition of one’s intellectual debts to others, and low concern for intellectual domination and certain kinds of social status”.

That translates to recognizing the limitations of one’s beliefs and being open to the perspectives of others, says Michael Lynch, a philosopher at the University of Connecticut in Storrs. “Somebody who has intellectual humility understands that they aren’t going to simply climb on top of a mountain of knowledge themselves,” Lynch says. “They recognize it is going to take some help.”

View More

Why these CT experts think Trump's supporters continue to stick by him despite indictments

Hearst Connecticut Media  online

2023-08-26

For Michael Lynch, a professor of philosophy at the University of Connecticut, this phenomenon is a manifestation of his latest research into the nature of political convictions. Increasingly, he said, American’s deeply-held political beliefs are becoming intertwined with their own sense of identity.

“To put it bluntly, Trump supporters aren’t changing their minds because that change would require changing who they are, and they want to be that person,” Lynch said.

View More

Show All +

Articles

The Value of Truth

The Boston Review

2021-03-01

In the jargon of academia, the study of what we can know, and how we can know it, is called “epistemology.” During the 1980s, philosopher Richard Rorty declared it dead and bid it good riddance. To Rorty and many other thinkers of that era, the idea that we even needed a theory of knowledge at all rested on outmoded, Cartesian assumptions that the mind was an innocent mirror of nature; he urged that we throw out the baby—“truth”—with the bathwater of seventeenth-century rationalism. What’s the Use of Truth?, he asked in the provocative title of his final book (published in 2007). His answer, like that of many of his contemporaries, was clear: not much.

How things have changed. Rorty wrote his major works before smartphones, social media, and Google. And even through the Internet’s early days, many believed that it could only enhance the democratization of information—if it had any impact on society at all. The ensuing decades have tempered that optimism, but they’ve also helped make the problem of knowledge more urgent, more grounded. When millions of voters believe, despite all evidence, that the election was stolen, that vaccines are dangerous, and that a cabal of child predators rule the world from a pizza parlor’s basement, it becomes clear that we cannot afford to ignore how knowledge is formed and distorted. We are living through an epistemological crisis.

View more

‘Always sticking to your convictions’ sounds like a good thing – but it isn’t

The Conversation

Michael Patrick Lynch

2019-09-20

There is nothing wrong with strong opinions. They are healthy in a democracy – an apathetic electorate is an ineffective electorate.

But a curious fact about American society’s supercharged political culture is that even the most humble debates (think: Which fried chicken sandwiches are best?) turn a tweet into matters of conviction.

View more

From One to Many: Recent Work on Truth

American Philosophical Quarterly

2016

In this paper, we offer a brief, critical survey of contemporary work on truth. We begin by reflecting on the distinction between substantivist and deflationary truth theories. We then turn to three new kinds of truth theory—Kevin Scharp’s replacement theory, John MacFarlane’s relativism, and the alethic pluralism pioneered by Michael Lynch and Crispin Wright. We argue that despite their ...

View more

Show All +