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Philosophy: Basic Readings
by
Linstead; Nigel Warburton (Editor)
Nigel Warburton brings philosophy to life with an imaginative selection of philosophical writings on key topics. Philosophy: Basic Readings is the ideal introduction to some of the most accessible and thought-provoking pieces in philosophy, both contemporary and classic. The second edition of Philosophy: Basic Readings has been expanded to include new pieces in each major area of philosophy: What is philosophy? God right and wrong the external world science mind art. The readings in Philosophy: Basic Readings complement the chapters in Philosophy: The Basics.
The Limits of Epistemology
by
Markus Gabriel; Alex Englander (Translator)
At the centre of modern epistemology lurks the problem of scepticism: how can we know that the forms of our cognition are compatible with the world? How can we state success conditions for knowledge claims without somehow transcending our discursive and fallible nature as knowers? By distinguishing different forms of scepticism, Markus Gabriel shows how all objective knowledge relies on shared discourses and how the essential corrigibility of knowledge claims is a crucial condition of their objectivity. We should understand scepticism not so much as posing a threat, but as offering a vital lesson about the fallibility of discursive thinking. By heeding this lesson, we can begin to reintegrate the solipsistic subject of modern epistemology back into the community of actual knowers. Taking his cue from Hegel, Wittgenstein and Brandom, Gabriel shows how intentionality as such is a public rather than a private phenomenon. He concedes that the sceptic can prove the necessary finitude of objective knowledge, but denies that this has to lead us into an aporia. Instead, it shows us the limits of the modern project of epistemology. Through an examination of different kinds of sceptical paradoxes, Gabriel not only demonstrates their indispensable role within epistemological theorising, but also argues for the necessary failure of all totalizing knowledge claims. In this way, epistemology, as the discipline that claims knowledge about knowledge, begins to grasp its own fallibility and, as a result, the true nature of its objectivity. The Limits of Epistemology will be of great value to students and scholars of philosophy.
Philosophy: Feminism
by
Carol Hay
This book addresses feminism, including the aspects of human nature, intersectionality, sexism and oppression, LGBTQ theory, ecofeminism, and power.
Content Notes:
part one. A historical introduction: A historical introduction : the three waves of feminism / Judy D. Whipps -- part two. Central theoretical concepts of feminist philosophy: Feminist perspectives on sexism and oppression / Daniel Silvermint ; Feminist perspectives on human nature / Lori Watson ; Feminist perspectives on power, domination, and exploitation / Julinna Oxley ; Intersectionality : locating and critiquing internal structures of oppression within feminism / Grayson Hunt -- part three. Subfields of feminist philosophy: Feminist history of philosophy / Susanne Sreedhar ; Feminist epistemology and philosophy of science / Nancy Arden McHugh ; Feminist ethics / Sarah Clark Miller ; Feminist social and political philosophy / Elizabeth Edenberg, Emily McGill-Rutherfod ; Feminist metaphysics and philosophy of language / E. Díaz-León ; Feminist perspectives on the philosophy of race / Ceila Bardwell-Jones ; Feminism and disability / Joel Michael Reynolds ; Feminist perspectives on reproduction and the family / Alice MacLachlan ; Feminist perspectives on LGBTQI theory / Maren Behrensen ; Feminist philosophy of religion / Elizabeth Burns ; Feminist environmental philosophy : ecofeminism / Erin McKenna.
Philosophy: Sex and Love
by
James Petrik and Arthur Zucker, editors
Summary: This book covers topics relevant to sex and love, including friendship, gender, marriage, adultery, and virtual (online) relationships. The use of film, literature, art, case studies, and other disciplines or situations/events provide illustrations of human experiences which work as gateways to questions philosophers try to address.
Content Notes:
chapter 1. Love / Aaron Smuts -- chapter 2. Sex / Raja Halwani -- chapter 3. God and religion / Matthew Carey Jordan -- chapter 4. Pleasure / Alan H. Goldman -- chapter 5. Family / Mary Lyndon Shanley -- chapter 6. Friendship / Diane Jeske -- chapter 7. Prostitution / Laurie Shrage -- chapter 8. Gender, identity, and society / Rachel McKinnon -- chapter 9. Marriage / Andrew Koppelman -- chapter 10. Adultery / Mark Piper -- chapter 11. Pornography / A. W. Eaton -- chapter 12. Autonomy, sex, and coercion : the problem of nonconsensual sex / James Petrik -- chapter 13. The psychology of love and sex / Donna M. Ashcraft -- chapter 14. Sexual perversion / Joseph H. Kupfer -- chapter 15. Virtual relationships : love and sex in cyberspace / Aaron Ben-Ze'ev.
Philosophy: Technology
by
Anthony F. Beavers
Summary: This book addresses the theme of ethics in such technology areas as cyber warfare, designing children, video games and virtual reality, nanotechnology, and technology and the environment. The use of film, literature, art, case studies, and other disciplines or situations/events provide illustrations of human experiences which work as gateways to questions philosophers try to address.
Content Notes:
chapter 1. Basic principles, concepts, and ideas in the philosophy of technology / Lawrence M. Hinman -- chapter 2. Education, technology, and social control / Claire Katz -- chapter 3. Technological ethics in context : the case of nanotechnology / Thomas M. Powers, S. Ismat Shah -- chapter 4. God out of the machine? / Charles Melvin Ess -- chapter 5. Designing children / Lawrence M. Hinman -- chapter 6. Cyborg humanity and the technologies of human enhancement / Mark Coeckelbergh -- chapter 7. Cognitive technolgoy / Derek Jones -- chapter 8. Video games and virtual reality / Robert F.J. Seddon -- chapter 9. Robots, sex, and love / John P. Sullins -- chapter 10. Robot warfare / Ryan Jenkins -- chapter 11. Cyberwar and the just war tradition / John Petrik -- chapter 12. Technology, the environment, and sustainability / Trish Glazebrook -- chapter 13. How technology is changing what and how we eat / Lisa Kretz.
SELECT COURSE TEXTS AVAILABLE IN THE WSU LIBRARY!!!
(follow their subject headings to explore the library shelves for closely related philosophies and thought! - see search box below)
How to Think about Weird Things
by
Theodore Schick; Lewis Vaughn
How to Think about Weird Things, is a concise and engaging text that offers students a step-by-step process by which to determine when a claim is likely to be true. Schick and Vaughn provide a course on critical thinking- emphasizing neither debunking nor advocating specific claims, but rather explaining principles of good reasoning that enable students to evaluate any claim, no matter how strange, for themselves. By teaching readers how to distinguish good reasons from bad reasons for believing a claim, this text helps students improve their decision-making abilities and provides them with a powerful weapon against all forms of hucksterism.
Philosophy of Religion
by
Keith E. Yandell
Keith Yandell's Philosophy of Religion: A Contemporary Introduction was one of the first textbooks to explore the philosophy of religion with reference to religions other than Christianity. This new, revised edition explores the logical validity and truth claims of several world religions--Christianity, Judaism, Islam, Hinduism, Buddhism, and Jainism--with updated, streamlined discussions on important topics in philosophy of religion such as: Religious pluralism Freedom and responsibility Evidentialist Moral Theism Reformed Epistemology Doxastic Practice Epistemology The problem of evil Ontological and cosmological arguments Other new features include updated Questions for Reflection,and new Annotated Bibliographies for each chapter, as well as an updated Glossary. This exciting new edition, much like its classic predecessor, is sure to be a classroom staple for undergraduate students studying philosophy of religion, as well as a comprehensive introductory read for anyone interested in the subject.
Find books in Philosophy (e-books and physical) through WSU Libraries Online Catalog - https://libcat.wichita.edu/vwebv/searchAdvanced
Library of Congress call numbers for Philosophy include:
B - Philosophy; BC - Logic; BH - Aesthetics; BJ - Ethics; BL - Religions, Mythology, Rationalism
Books and journals in this call number range can be found on the third floor of Ablah Library. Related call numbers are D (History, General and Old World);HC (Economics, History and Conditions, Natural Production); HN (Social history, Social Problems, Social Reform); HX (Socialism, Communism, Anarchism); JC (Political Theory, Theory of the State); and Q (Science, 2nd floor).
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The constitution of algorithms : ground-truthing, programming, formulating
by
Florian Jaton
A laboratory study that investigates how algorithms come into existence. Algorithms--often associated with the terms big data, machine learning, or artificial intelligence--underlie the technologies we use every day, and disputes over the consequences, actual or potential, of new algorithms arise regularly. In this book, Florian Jaton offers a new way to study computerized methods, providing an account of where algorithms come from and how they are constituted, investigating the practical activities by which algorithms are progressively assembled rather than what they may suggest or require once they are assembled. Drawing on a four-year ethnographic study of a computer science laboratory that specialized in digital image processing, Jaton illuminates the invisible processes that are behind the development of algorithms. Tracing what he terms a set of intertwining courses of actions sharing common finalities, he describes the practical activity of creating algorithms through the lenses of ground-truthing, programming, and formulating. He first presents the building of ground truths, referential repositories that form the material basis for algorithms. Then, after considering programming's resistance to ethnographic scrutiny, he describes programming courses of action he attended at the laboratory. Finally, he offers an account of courses of action that successfully formulated some of the relationships among the data of a ground-truth database, revealing the links between ground-truthing, programming, and formulating activities--entangled processes that lead to the shaping of algorithms. In practice, ground-truthing, programming, and formulating form a whirlwind process, an emergent and intertwined agency.
Social and conceptual issues in astrobiology
by
edited by Kelly C. Smith and Carlos Mariscal
How universal are our moral obligations? Should we attempt to communicate with life beyond our planet? What is "life"? Social and Conceptual Issues in Astrobiology explores the most important questions related to the field of astrobiology, and the resulting book is the most comprehensive, interdisciplinary approach focused on the humanistic issues of the multidisciplinary science of astrobiology to date.
Questions surrounding life on other planets have troubled humankind for centuries; this volume outlines the questions for the next decade of research in the field of astrobiology. Kelly C. Smith and Carlos Mariscal have assembled the top scholars from fields spanning history, communication, philosophy, law, and theology to consider the implications of life elsewhere. The perspectives supplied by this expansive group of contributors have never before been collected in book a book focused on astrobiology. This book sets a benchmark for future work in astrobiology, giving readers the groundwork from which to base the continuous scholarship coming from this ever-growing scientific field.