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E-raamat: Email and Ethics: Style and Ethical Relations in Computer-Mediated Communications [Taylor & Francis e-raamat]

(Charles Sturt University, Australia)
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E-mail and Ethics explores the ways in which interpersonal relations are affected by being conducted via computer-mediated communication.
The advent of this channel of communication has prompted a renewed investigation into the nature and value of forms of human association. Rooksby addresses these concerns in her rigorous investigation of the benefits, limitations and implications of computer-mediated communication.
With its depth of research and clarity of style, this book will be of essential interest to philosophers, scholars of communication, cultural and media studies, and all those interested in the importance and implications of computer-mediated communication.
Acknowledgements vii
Introduction 1(1)
Reach 2(2)
Textuality 4(2)
Structure of the book 6(2)
Summary 8(1)
Style and ethics
9(30)
Introduction
9(1)
An expressive theory of style
10(5)
Intersubjectivity of style
15(6)
A topography of style
21(13)
Textuality and style: CMC
34(2)
Conclusions: the ethics of understanding
36(3)
Empathy in computer-mediated communication
39(32)
Introduction
39(2)
Attunement and attention
41(3)
A phenomenological account of empathy
44(10)
Limits to empathy
54(4)
Language and empathy
58(4)
Empathy and writing
62(8)
Conclusions
70(1)
Affect and action in CMC
71(31)
Introduction: style revisited
71(2)
The hermeneutic gap: does textuality allow dialogue?
73(12)
Words and actions: text acts with CMCs
85(15)
Conclusions
100(2)
Technical constraints on CMC
102(35)
Introduction
102(2)
Machine-dependence
104(5)
Temporality: synchronous text and asynchronous conversation
109(6)
Textuality
115(11)
Place and CMC
126(9)
Conclusions
135(2)
Computer-mediated friendship
137(34)
Introduction
137(1)
Friendship and personal relations
138(1)
Companionable friendship: Aristotle
139(8)
Friendship in letters: Erasmus
147(10)
Contemporary feminist accounts of friendship
157(6)
CMC friendship
163(5)
Conclusions
168(3)
Politics and CMC
171(29)
Introduction
171(1)
Political and personal relations
172(8)
Habermas's ideal speech situation and on-line politics
180(13)
CMC politics: strengths and uses
193(6)
Conclusions
199(1)
Conclusion 200(4)
Notes 204(35)
Bibliography 239(16)
Index 255


Emma Rooksby is Research Fellow at the Centre for Applied Philosophy and Public Ethics, Australia. Her research covers computer ethics, including on-line democracy, on-line relationship and the ethics of text-based communication. Her publications include Habitus: a sense of place (edited with Jean Hillier, Routledge, forthcoming), and 'Empathy in computer-mediated communication' in Mark Wolf (ed.) Virtual Morality (Peter Lang Publishing, forthcoming).