The digital phoenix : how computers are changing philosophy

著者

    • Bynum, Terrell Ward
    • Moor, James H.
    • American Philosophical Association. Committee on Philosophy and Computers

書誌事項

The digital phoenix : how computers are changing philosophy

edited by Terrell Ward Bynum and James H. Moor

Blackwell Publishers, 1998

  • : pbk

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注記

"Published in cooperation with the Committee on Philosophy and Computers of the American Philosophical Association and also with the journal Metaphilosophy."

Includes bibliographical references and index

内容説明・目次

内容説明

Computers are having a significant impact on foundational concepts in philosophy such as the mind, consciousness, reasoning, knowledge, logic, truth and creativity.

目次

Introduction: How Computers are Changing Philosophy: Terrell Ward Bynum (Southern Connecticut State University) and James H. Moor (Dartmouth College). Part I: The Impact of Computing on Philosophical Issues:. 1. Procedural Epistemology: John L. Pollock (University of Arizona, USA). 2. Epistemology and Computing: Henry Kyburg (University of Rochester, USA). 3. Computation and the Philosophy of Science: Paul Thagard (University of Waterloo, Canada). 4. Anomaly--driven Theory Redesign: Computational Philosophy of Science Experiments: Lindley Darden (University of Maryland, USA). 5. Representation of Philosophical Argumentation: Theodore Scaltsas (University of Edinburgh, UK). 6. Computers, Visualization, and the Nature of Reasoning: Jon Barwise (Indiana University at Bloomington, USA) and John Etchemendy (Stanford University, USA). 7. Digital Metaphysics: Eric Steinhart (William Paterson University, USA). 8. Philosophical Content and Method of Artificial Life: Mark A. Bedau (Reed College, USA). 9. The Neural Representation of the Social World: Paul M. Churchland (University of California at San Diego, USA). 10. Qualitative Experience in Machines: William Lycan (University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, USA). 11. Response to my Critics: Hubert Dreyfus (University of California at Berkeley, USA). 12. Assessing Artificial Intelligence and Its Critics: James H. Moor (Dartmouth College, USA). 13. Philosophy and "Super" Computation: Selmer Bringsjord (Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, USA). 14. Philosophy and Computer Science: Reflections on the Program Verification Debate: James H. Fetzer (University of Minnesota at Duluth, USA). 15. Global Information Ethics: Terrell Ward Bynum (Southern Connecticut State University, USA). 16. How Computers Extend Artificial Morality: Peter Danielson (University of British Columbia, Canada). 17. Computing and Creativity: Margaret Boden (University of Sussex, UK). Part II: The Impact of Computing on Professional Philosophy:. 18. Teaching Philosophy in CyberSpace: Ron Barnette (Valdosta State University, USA). 19. Philosophy Teaching on the World--Wide--Web: John Dorbolo (Oregon State University, USA). 20. Multimedia and Research in Philosophy: Robert Cavalier (Carnegie Mellon University, USA). 21. Teaching of Philosophy with Multimedia: John L. Fodor (Educational Media Resources, USA). 22. Resources in Ethics on the World Wide Web: Lawrence M. Hinman (University of San Diego, USA). 23. The APA Internet Bulletin Board and Web Site: Saul Traiger (Occidental College, USA). 24. Using Computer Technology for Philosophical Research: An APA Report: Robert Cavalier (Carnegie Mellon University, USA). 25. Using Computer Technology for Teaching Philosophy: An APA Report: Ron Barnette (Valdosta State University, USA). 26. Using Computer Technology for Professional Cooperation: An APA Report: Lawrence M. Hinman (University of San Diego, USA). Index.

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