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E-raamat: Friendship, Robots, and Social Media: False Friends and Second Selves [Taylor & Francis e-raamat]

(University of Minnesota Duluth, USA)
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Various emerging technologies, from social robotics to social media, appeal to our desire for social interactions, while avoiding some of the risks and costs of face-to-face human interaction. But can they offer us real friendship? In this book, Alexis Elder outlines a theory of friendship drawing on Aristotle and contemporary work on social ontology, and then uses it to evaluate the real value of social robotics and emerging social technologies.

In the first part of the book Elder develops a robust and rigorous ontology of friendship: what it is, how it functions, what harms it, and how it relates to familiar ethical and philosophical questions about character, value, and well-being. In Part II she applies this ontology to emerging trends in social robotics and human-robot interaction, including robotic companions for lonely seniors, therapeutic robots used to teach social skills to children on the autism spectrum, and companionate robots currently being developed for consumer markets. Elder articulates the moral hazards presented by these robots, while at the same time acknowledging their real and measurable benefits. In the final section she shifts her focus to connections between real people, especially those enabled by social media. Arguing against critics who have charged that these new communication technologies are weakening our social connections, Elder explores ways in which text messaging, video chats, Facebook, and Snapchat are enabling us to develop, sustain, and enrich our friendship in new and meaningful ways.

Acknowledgements vii
Introduction 1(14)
PART I Friendship
15(2)
1 Repeatable Reasons, Irreplaceable Friends
17(20)
2 What Shared Identity Means in Friendship
37(19)
3 Why Bad People Can't Be Good Friends
56(15)
PART II Robots
71(2)
4 False Friends and False Coinage: A Tool for Navigating the Ethics of Sociable Robots
73(17)
5 What's Wrong With Robot "Friends" for Lonely Seniors?
90(13)
6 Counterfeit Currency Versus Monopoly Money: Using Appearances to Build Capacities
103(14)
7 Should You Buy Yourself a "Friend"? Ethics of Consumer Markets for Robot Companions
117(20)
PART III Social Media
137(2)
8 Humans Aren't Cows: An Aristotelian Defense of Technologically Mediated Friendship
139(23)
9 Taking Control of Conversations Through Technologically Mediated Communication
162(16)
10 What Words Can't Say: Emoji and Other Non-Verbal Elements of Technologically Mediated Communication
178(18)
11 The Moral Import of Medium
196(24)
Conclusion 220(5)
Index 225
Alexis M. Elder is an assistant professor of philosophy at the University of Minnesota Duluth. Her research focuses on friendship and social technologies. Her publications include "Excellent Online Friendships: An Aristotelian Defense of Social Media" in Ethics and Information Technology, and "Zhuangzi on Friendship and Death" in Southern Journal of Philosophy.