Philosophy and Computing Essays in Epistemology, Philosophy of Mind, Logic, and Ethics /
| Collectivité auteur: | |
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| Autres auteurs: | |
| Résumé: | VI, 242 p. 4 illus. text |
| Langue: | anglais |
| Publié: |
Cham :
Springer International Publishing : Imprint: Springer,
2017.
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| Édition: | 1st ed. 2017. |
| Collection: | Philosophical Studies Series,
128 |
| Sujets: | |
| Accès en ligne: | https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-61043-6 |
| Format: | Électronique Livre |
Table des matières:
- Introduction: Situating Computing in Philosophy (Thomas M. Powers)
- Chapter 1. Levels of Computational Explanation (Michael Rescorla)
- Chapter 2. On the Relation of Computing to the World ( William J. Rapaport)
- Chapter 3. Cognitive Computation sans Representation (Paul Schweizer)
- Chapter 4. Software Error as a Limit to Inquiry for Finite Agents: Challenges for the Post-human Scientist (John F. Symons and Jack K. Horner)
- Chapter 5. The Singularity Business: Toward a Realistic, Fine-grained Economics for an AI-Infused World (Selmer Bringsjord)
- Chapter 6. Artificial Moral Cognition: from Functionalism to Autonomous Moral Agents (Don Howard and Ioan Muntean)
- Chapter 7. AI and the Automation Of Wisdom (Shannon Vallor)
- Chapter 8. An Analysis of Machine Ethics from the Perspective of Autonomy (Mario Verdicchio )
- Chapter 9. Beyond Informed Consent: Investigating Ethical Justifications for Disclosing, Donating or Sharing Personal Data in Research (Markus Christen, Josep Domingo-Ferrer, Dominik Herrmann, Jeroen van den Hoven)
- Chapter 10. Big Data, Digital Traces and the Metaphysics of the Self (Soraj Hongladarom)
- Chapter 11. Why Big Data Needs the Virtues (Frances S. Grodzinsky).