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X-Files and Philosophy: The Truth Is in Here [Pehme köide]

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  • Formaat: Paperback / softback, 288 pages, kõrgus x laius: 228x152 mm, Illustrations
  • Sari: Popular Culture and Philosophy
  • Ilmumisaeg: 01-Jun-2017
  • Kirjastus: Open Court Publishing Co ,U.S.
  • ISBN-10: 0812699580
  • ISBN-13: 9780812699586
Teised raamatud teemal:
  • Formaat: Paperback / softback, 288 pages, kõrgus x laius: 228x152 mm, Illustrations
  • Sari: Popular Culture and Philosophy
  • Ilmumisaeg: 01-Jun-2017
  • Kirjastus: Open Court Publishing Co ,U.S.
  • ISBN-10: 0812699580
  • ISBN-13: 9780812699586
Teised raamatud teemal:
Philosophers from the US, Europe, and Australia present 35 essays on The X-Files in the context of philosophical ideas. They discuss science and the fantastic, science and pseudoscience, metaphysics, biotechnology, monsters, conspiracy theorists, experiments on humans, whether Mulder is a philosopher, the truth, belief, fear, ghosts, phenomenology, fate, death, artificial intelligence, modernism and postmodernism, Heidegger, and other topics. Annotation ©2017 Ringgold, Inc., Portland, OR (protoview.com) The X-Files took the risky step of having two FBI agents investigate those tall tales recounted in The National Enquirer and in sensational conspiracy theories, and believed in by millions of people, but not usually by the most conventional minds. These stories, in the world of The X-Files, are generally found to be true or else the truth is even more bizarre and improbable than the modern legends themselves.In The X-Files and Philosophy, thirty-six fearless philosophers seek for the truth which is out there, in here, at least somewhere, or (as the postmodernists claim) nowhere. One big issue is whether the weird and unexplained happenings, including the existence of entities unknown to traditional science, could or might really exist. And if they did, what would be the right and proper way to behave towards them? Some of these entities seem to flout conventional laws of nature but perhaps we need to allow for different, as yet undiscovered, laws. If such fabulous entities really exist, what do we owe them? And if they don’t exist, why do we imagine they do? In The X-Files, regular science is represented by Scully and usually turns out to be wrong, while open-minded credulity or pseudoscience is represented by Mulder and usually turns out to be right, or at least somehow on the right track. Scully demands objective, repeatable evidence, and she usually gets it, with Mulder’s help, in astounding and unwelcome ways. What lessons should we take from the finding of The X-Files that respectable science is nearly always wrong and outrageous speculative imagination nearly always right? Can fantastic, seemingly impossible happenings be explained by our limited human knowledge? Is reality far more diverse than we suppose, and if so, why do those in power always try to conceal and suppress this fact? Weird and unexplained events are often pooh-poohed by the government and the media, giving rise to suspicions that there is a conspiracy of powerful interests to keep the truth from coming out. But what makes a conspiracy theory? Are people inclined to imagine conspiracies where they don’t exist? And what are the rules for distinguishing real-life conspiracies from nonexistent imaginary ones? Are Scully and Mulder exemplary moral characters? Do they always pursue the truth in the most effective way? If they ever do have the opportunity to make definite contact with intelligent aliens, should they initiate communication? When is it morally okay for humans to experiment on other humans or on aliens, and for aliens to experiment on humans? Should Mulder want to believe or is this an ethical lapse? Do we need faith as well as science? Can machines become conscious? If so, can they be blamed and punished for what they do? Is Artificial Intelligence a danger to humans? What does The X-Files tell us about the things that fascinate us and make us afraid? Why do we find these stories about hidden truths and hidden motives so appealing as fiction? If we encounter highly developed aliens, should we regard them as our natural leaders and rulers? Does The X-Files encourage bad ways of thinking about science and human problems? Since we all allow our governments to keep secrets from us, do we really believe that commitment to the truth is merely a sham? There may be more things in heaven and earth than are dreamed of in science, but, as this book shows, there are not more things in heaven and earth than are dreamed of in philosophy.
X-Philes and X-Philosophy ix
Robert Arp
I Mulder or Scully?
1(44)
1 Why Scully Is Usually Wrong
3(8)
Steven B. Cowan
2 Trust No One ... But Yourself
11(8)
Kyle A. Hammonds
3 Scientist versus Pseudoscientist
19(10)
Daniel Malloy
4 Science and the Fantastic
29(8)
Marc W. Cole
5 Mulder's Metaphysics
37(8)
Elizabeth F. Cooke
II Here Be Monsters
45(26)
6 The Great Mutato and Biotechnology
47(8)
Richard Bilsker
7 Monstrous Fear
55(8)
Andrea Zanin
8 Five Ways of Being a Monster
63(8)
David Freeman
III It's a Conspiracy
71(30)
9 How to Be a Good Conspiracy Theorist
73(8)
Diane Gall
10 They're Out to Get Us
81(12)
William Rodriguez
11 The Conspiracy Is Real
93(8)
Charlene Elsby
Rob Luzecky
IV Governments Do Bad Stuff
101(26)
12 Dilemmas for Prisoners
103(8)
Dennis Loughrey
13 What's Wrong with Experimenting on Humans?
111(8)
Rob Luzecky
Charlene Elsby
14 What They Have Done
119(8)
Christopher Ketcham
V Can We Trust Ourselves?
127(42)
15 The Madness of Sneaky Fox
129(16)
John M. Thompson
16 Bad Memories in "Bad Blood"
145(8)
Cam Cobb
Michael K. Potter
17 Monday ... Again
153(8)
Jeremy Pierce
18 Is Mulder a Philosopher?
161(8)
Neil Mussett
VI Elusive Truth
169(38)
19 When Is It Right to Hide the Truth?
171(16)
Jason Walker
20 The Truths Are Out There
187(12)
Courtland Lewis
21 All Lies Lead to the Truth
199(8)
Scott Bandy
Adam Barkman
VII Belief and Make-Believe
207(34)
22 I Want to Believe ... and That's the Problem
209(8)
S. Evan Kreider
23 I Can't Be Sure of Anything Anymore
217(8)
Kevin Meeker
24 Not Believing What's Not True
225(8)
Joshua Mugg
25 Wanting and Willing to Believe
233(8)
Chris Gavaler
Nathaniel Goldberg
VIII Fear and Trembling
241(26)
26 Submitting to Superior Aliens
243(8)
Jerold J. Abrams
27 Why Are We Afraid?
251(8)
Justin Fetterman
28 Come Sweet Death
259(8)
Daniel Malloy
IX The Ghost Within
267(24)
29 The Ghost's Right to Life
269(6)
Mirela Fus
Marvin Lee Dupree
30 Killer Artificial Intelligence
275(8)
Jai Galliott
31 The Ghost Is the Machine
283(8)
Marc W. Cole
X From Out There to In Here
291(36)
32 Is The X-Files Bad for Us?
293(8)
Kevin Meeker
33 Mulder and Scully, You're Late!
301(12)
Tim Jones
34 Modernist Hero in a Postmodern Age
313(8)
Karma Waltonen
35 Heidegger and The X-Files
321(6)
Frank Scalambrino
Bibliography 327(6)
The X-Philes 333(8)
Index 341
Robert Arp holds a Ph.D. in Philosophy. He is the author of Scenario Visualization (2008) and co-author of three books including What's Good on TV (2011) and Philosophy DeMYSTifieD (2001). He is the editor of 1001 Ideas that Changed the Way We Think (2013) and co-editor of at least a dozen other books, including Batman and Philosophy (2008), South Park and Philosophy: You Know I Learned Something Today (2006), Breaking Bad and Philosophy (2012), and Downton Abbey and Philosophy.