
Clearer Thinking with Spencer Greenberg Are we in an honesty crisis? (with Christian B. Miller)
51 snips
Apr 17, 2026 Christian B. Miller, a philosophy professor and author focused on moral psychology and honesty, explores whether honesty is eroding as tech and incentives change. He discusses how AI and the internet make cheating easier, why people often cheat a little to preserve self-image, and how detection, assessment design, and identity cues can curb dishonesty.
AI Snips
Chapters
Books
Transcript
Episode notes
AI And Internet Lowered The Barrier To Cheating
- AI and the internet lowered cheating friction while making detection harder, creating a growing honesty problem in classrooms.
- Christian Miller cites student plagiarism via the web and recent AI-produced work as major factors increasing temptation and masking responsibility.
Move High Stakes Work Into Supervised Settings
- Protect graded work by bringing assessments into supervised settings to remove AI advantages.
- Miller recommends in-class essays, traditional blue-book exams, or oral exams as practical anti-cheating approaches.
Detection Must Be Highly Reliable To Punish Cheating
- Detection tools would likely reduce cheating but must be near-perfect for punitive use.
- Miller speculates AI companies may avoid releasing reliable detectors because it would reduce AI usage, while professors need near 100% reliability to punish.




