Produktbild: A Theory of Jerks and Other Philosophical Misadventures

A Theory of Jerks and Other Philosophical Misadventures

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Beschreibung

Produktdetails

Einband

Taschenbuch

Erscheinungsdatum

10.11.2020

Verlag

MIT Press

Seitenzahl

380

Maße (L/B/H)

20,3/13,7/2,3 cm

Gewicht

492 g

Sprache

Englisch

ISBN

978-0-262-53959-3

Beschreibung

Produktdetails

Einband

Taschenbuch

Erscheinungsdatum

10.11.2020

Verlag

MIT Press

Seitenzahl

380

Maße (L/B/H)

20,3/13,7/2,3 cm

Gewicht

492 g

Sprache

Englisch

ISBN

978-0-262-53959-3

Herstelleradresse

Libri GmbH
Europaallee 1
36244 Bad Hersfeld
DE

Email: gpsr@libri.de

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  • Produktbild: A Theory of Jerks and Other Philosophical Misadventures
  • Part One: Jerks and Excuses
    1. A Theory of Jerks
    2. Forgetting as an Unwitting Confession of Your Values
    3. The Happy Coincidence Defense and The-Most-You-Can-Do Sweet Spot
    4. Cheeseburger Ethics (or How Often Do Ethicists Call Their Mothers?)
    5. On Not Seeking Pleasure Much
    6. How Much Should You Care about How You Feel in Your Dreams?
    7. Imagining Yourself in Another's Shoes vs. Extending Your Love
    8. Is It Perfectly Fine to Aim for Moral Mediocrity?
    9. A Theory of Hypocrisy
    10. On Not Distinguishing Too Finely Among Your Motivations
    11. The Mush of Normativity
    12. A Moral Dunning-Kruger Effect?
    13. The Moral Compass and the Liberal Ideal in Moral Education
    Part Two: Cute AI and Zombie Robots
    14. Should Your Driverless Car Kill You So Others May Live?
    15. Cute AI and the ASIMO Problem
    16. My Daughter's Rented Eyes
    17. Someday, Your Employer Will Technologically Control Your Moods
    18. Cheerfully Suicidal AI Slaves
    19. We Would Have Greater Moral Obligations to Conscious Robots Than to Otherwise Similar Humans
    20. How Robots and Monsters Might Destroy Human Moral Systems
    21. Our Possible Imminent Divinity
    22. Skepticism, Godzilla, and the Artificial Computerized Many-Branching You
    23. How to Accidentally Become a Zombie Robot
    Part Three: Regrets and Birthday Cake
    24. Dreidel: A Seemingly Foolish Game That Contains the Moral World in Miniature
    25. Does It Matter If the Passover Story Is Literally True?
    26. Memories of My Father
    27. Flying Free of the Deathbed, with Technological Help
    28. Thoughts on Conjugal Love
    29. Knowing What You Love
    30. The Epistemic Status of Deathbed Regrets
    31. Competing Perspectives on One's Final, Dying Thought
    32. Profanity Inflation, Profanity Migration, and the Paradox of Prohibition (or I Love You, "Fuck")
    33. The Legend of the Leaning Behaviorist
    34. What Happens to Democracy When the Experts Can't Be Both Factual and Balanced?
    35. On the Morality of Hypotenuse Walking
    36. Birthday Cake and a Chapel
    Part Four: Cosmic Freaks
    37. Possible Psychology of a Matrioshka Brain
    38. A Two-Seater Homunculus
    39. Is the United States Literally Conscious?
    40. Might You Be a Cosmic Freak?
    41. Choosing to Be That Fellow Back Then: Voluntarism about Personal Identity
    42. How Everything You Do Might Have Huge Cosmic Significance
    43. Penelope's Guide to Defeating Time, Space, and Causation
    44. Goldfish-Pool Immortality
    45. Are Garden Snails Conscious? Yes, No, or *Gong*
    Part Five: Kant vs. the Philosopher of Hair
    46. Truth, Dare, and Wonder
    47. Trusting Your Sense of Fun
    48. What's in People's Stream of Experience During Philosophy Talks?
    49. Why Metaphysics Is Always Bizarre
    50. The Philosopher of Hair
    51. Obfuscatory Philosophy as Intellectual Authoritarianism and Cowardice
    52. Kant on Killing Bastards, Masturbation, Organ Donation, Homosexuality, Tyrants, Wives, and Servants
    53. Nazi Philosophers, World War I, and the Grand Wisdom Hypothesis
    54. Against Charity in the History of Philosophy
    55. Invisible Revisions
    56. On Being Good at Seeming Smart
    57. Blogging and Philosophical Cognition
    58. Will Future Generations Find Us Morally Loathsome?