Abstract This study introduces “anticipatory dignity” as a fundamental extension of human dignity discourse to address temporal challenges posed by algorithmic prediction in educational settings. Building on Kantian ethics, Feinberg’s “right to an open future”, and Raz’s conception of meaningful autonomy, anticipatory dignity designates the right to maintain cognitive openness against premature algorithmic classification that forecloses developmental possibilities before conscious choice can intervene. This philosophical innovation addresses a critical gap in educational philosophy: existing frameworks lack adequate conceptual resources to protect human agency from predictive systems that transform educational development from open-ended self-discovery into continuous optimization. Analysis of South Korea’s AI Digital Textbook initiative illustrates how machine learning institutionalizes epistemic foreclosure despite promises of objectivity. The research proposes institutional mechanisms including Student Fundamental Rights Impact Assessments and prediction ceilings limiting algorithmic forecasts to developmentally appropriate timeframes. These proposals, informed by comparative analysis of EU, Dutch, and Canadian AI governance frameworks, ensure algorithmic personalization serves human flourishing rather than replacing human choice with machine inference.
Jun et al. (Sat,) studied this question.