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Philip K. Dick and Philosophy PDF

467 Pages·2011·1.77 MB·English
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Table of Contents Praise Popular Culture and Philosophy Series Editor: George A. Reisch Title Page Through a Screen Darkly Chapter 01 - Hollywood Doesn’t Know Dick We Can Conceive It for Ourselves Wholesale Free Will at the Box Office Determinism’s Bounty on Free Will Skepticism for Fun and Profit What’s So Bad about Determinism? What’s So Bad about Skepticism? A Happy Ending? Chapter 02 - A Quintessence of Dust Show Me What You’re Made Of Have You Ever Retired a Human by Mistake? The Lung-less, All-Penetrating Masterful World-Silence Do You Think Androids Have Souls? The Cardinal Mystery of Creation Chapter 03 - Dick Doesn’t Do Heroes You’ve Been Adjusted We Can Endorse That for You Wholesale Nagging Spouses and Robotic Home-Wreckers Scott versus Linklater Deckard versus Arctor From Hover Cars to Substance D Through a Screen, Darkly Chapter 04 - Ewe, Robot How Animals Make Us Human Narcissism in a “More Human than Human” World Empathy in a “More Human than Human” World The Shock of Being Alive The Lives of Electric Others Identity Crises Chapter 05 - Just Who and How Many Do You Think You Are? The User Illusion In a Mirror, Darkly You Don’t Always Get Along The Outer Workings of the Mind The Scanner-Self The Valuable Self Chapter 06 - Will You Survive a Trip to Rekall, Inc.? Follow the Psyche The Perils of Rekall, Inc. Gotta Have Soul? Future Selves and Imposters Selfless? Is It Live or Is It Memorex? Chapter 07 - Scan Thyself How Do You Know You’re Not an Android? The Art of Knowing Arctor What Does A Scanner See? Phil Chews the Fat Chapter 08 - Human or Machine, Does It Mind or Matter? Don’t Think about It . . . You Ever Take That Test Yourself? I Love You, My Artificial Construct . . . Because My Furnace Believed the House Was Cold Shaky Theological Foundations The Right Stuff Soul Against the Archons Chapter 09 - Matt Damon Is a Vast Sinister Conspiracy A Variety of Free Will Worth Having Terrible Freedom Pre-Crime and Pre-Punishment Freedom and Madness Chapter 10 - How to Build a Democracy that Doesn’t Fall Apart Two Hundred Years Later Rule of the Wise Spinning a Bottle Throwing the Rascals Out Checks and Challenges How Can Random Machinery Be Rational? Giving and Selling Chapter 11 - We Can Manipulate You Wholesale Sure I Deceived You, but What about Me? Finding a Lever for Manipulation Categorically, We Have an Imperative Problem Utilitarian Doesn’t Necessarily Mean Coveralls Only Remembered as the Blonde Shot in the Head Like People, Like Organizations Chapter 12 - Grow, My Dears, the Eugenicist Said The Bad The Good The Ugly And the Next Step The World Is Fake Chapter 13 - Things Are Seldom What They Seem How Are Things in Glocca Morra—or Anywhere Else, for That Matter? Ma or Machine? What’s Really Real? Alternate Realities? Back to Earth Chapter 14 - Trauma of the Real Breakthrough to the Real Reality Is Not Real Procession of Dummies Remembrance of Being, Passed Chapter 15 - Lies, Incorporated The Epistemology of Deception How Do We Get Deceived? Who Deceives Us? Circles within Circles Self-Deception How Can We Detect Deception? Chapter 16 - The Blob Necessitates Of Blob The Nature and Origin of the “Mind” The Origin and Nature of Affective Disorder Of Plasmatic Bondage The Power of the Intellect, or of Fat’s Emotional Liberation Chapter 17 - The Gnosis of 2-3-74 Dick’s Gnosis about Gnostics Dick’s Twins Results of the Primordial Rape Pink Light Ay, There’s the Wub Chapter 18 - Replicating Morality Beyond Lies the Other How to Tell if You Are Really Just a Robot Can a Blade Runner Love a Robot? How to Build a Moral Robot PUBLIC RELATIONS GUIDE FOR NEW OFFICERS DIVISION OF PRECRIME 01. Don’t We Arrest Innocent People? 02. But Is It Really Inappropriate to Punish Pre-criminals? 03. What Evidence Establishes Guilt? 04. What about Leaks? Chapter 20 - If the Universe Isn’t Real, How Should We Treat Other People? To Be or Not To Be—Is That the Question? He Ain’t Heavy, He’s My Other Fifty Ways to Love Your Other Puppets and Precogs Chapter 21 - Knowing Tomorrow While Choosing Today Freedom and Prediction Outside of Time? Prediction, or Sight? Perfect or Probabilistic? Chapter 22 - Total Recall’s Total Rethink Memory and the Brain-Butchers Owning Your Actions, Owning Your Past Inpsychation and Chains of Will Quaid’s Problem—Mucky Origins Freedom Without Origins Chapter 23 - Lonely Wolves Society’s a Bad Hit (If You’re Banging Up, Cranking, or Popping) Cultural Minority Report The Problem with Drugs It’s the Nausea Wolves Finish Last Futurity Doctored Chapter 24 - I Know What You Did Next Summer Pay Now, Live Later I Can Predict What You (Don’t) Do Next Summer Living in the Time of the Crime Always Invest in the Future Summarizing the Future The Future as Predictive Text Chapter 25 - Untimely Speculations Human, All Too Human Preparatory Human Beings On the Advantage and Disadvantage of Eternity for Life Chapter 26 - The Day Roosevelt Was Assassinated The Story Reality Determinism Time in the One Real World Precog a Are You Chapter 27 - Time in Unfixed Are You Time through Travel You Blur a Are You Briefings Chapter 28 - “Autofac” Chapter 29 - “King of the Elves” Chapter 30 - “The Golden Man” Chapter 31 - “Piper in the Woods” Chapter 32 - “The Exit Door Leads In” Chapter 33 - “The Gun” The Master’s Own Voice Chapter 34 - Beyond Lies the Wub Chapter 35 - The Eyes Have It Skin-Jobs Index Copyright Page Praise for Philip K. Dick and Philosophy: Do Androids Have Kindred Spirits? “Life sometimes imitates art, and we’re heading toward many of the technologies and scenarios imagined by Philip Dick, one of the most iconic and philosophical writers in science fiction. Philip K. Dick and Philosophy: Do Androids Have Kindred Spirits? is a nice, accessible guide to many metaphysical and ethical issues waiting in our future.” —PATRICK LIN, co-editor of Robot Ethics and co-author of What Is Nanotechnology and Why Does It Matter? “Philip K. Dick and Philosophy: Do Androids Have Kindred Spirits? is an intelligent, exciting, and highly entertaining read that will be valued by all thoughtful Dick fans as well as philosophers. The original and thought- provoking chapters assembled by Dylan Wittkower explore a vast range of philosophical topics and display the breadth and depth of Dick’s writing with great style.” —MARYA SCHECHTMAN, author of The Constitution of Selves “Philip K. Dick was one of the twentieth century’s most penetrating writers concerned with the human condition. Mortality and self-knowledge obsessed him, and his work on these topics is some of the most thoughtful we have seen. Amazingly, Dylan Wittkower has managed to assemble a collection of thinkers who not only understand Dick but whose explanations will help the rest of us understand him better.” —JOSEPH C. PITT, author of Thinking About Technology “For anyone who’s ever wondered if they might be a replicant, Philip K. Dick and Philosophy: Do Androids Have Kindred Spirits? is required reading. As these writers show, some of the deepest questions that we confront—questions about identity, free will, and our place in the universe—are perfectly illustrated by the memorable characters populating Dick’s fictional worlds, from the Nexus-6 androids, to the Precogs, to the customers of Rekal, Inc.” —AMY KIND, contributor to Star Trek and Philosophy and Battlestar Galactica and Philosophy “Some minds reflect this age, others incubate the next. Humanity is about to stumble into a new, perhaps terrifying age. Thanks to the incisive chapters Dylan Wittkower has assembled in Philip K. Dick and Philosophy: Do Androids Hve Kindred Spirits?, we may not do so blindly.” —R. SCOTT BAKKER, author of The White-Luck Warrior, Disciple of the Dog, and Neuropath “An advanced degree in Dick-ology, an essential book for anyone wishing to discover the shocking depth of Philip K Dick’s ideas.” —DAVID GILL, publisher, Total Dick-Head blog “Dylan Wittkower has assembled a fantastic collection of chapters analyzing the deep themes of Dick’s stories, including the elusiveness of free will, the ambiguous nature of personhood, and the uncertain reliability of knowledge. Philip K. Dick and Philosophy: Do Androids Have Kindred Spirits? is a real treat for fans of both Dick’s stories and the movie adaptations.” —ERIC J. SILVERMAN, author of The Prudence of Love

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Science fiction writer Philip K. Dick (1928-1982) is the giant imagination behind so much recent popular culture--both movies directly based on his writings, such as Blade Runner (based on the novel Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep?), Total Recall, Minority Report, and The Adjustment Bureau plus
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Most books are stored in the elastic cloud where traffic is expensive. For this reason, we have a limit on daily download.