A Philosopher Looks at Digital Communication


Book Description

Communication is complicated, and so is the ethics of communication. We communicate about innumerable topics, to varied audiences, using a gamut of technologies. The ethics of communication, therefore, has to address a wide range of technical, ethical and epistemic requirements. In this book, Onora O'Neill shows how digital technologies have made communication more demanding: they can support communication with huge numbers of distant and dispersed recipients; they can amplify or suppress selected content; and they can target or ignore selected audiences. Often this is done anonymously, making it harder for readers and listeners, viewers and browsers, to assess which claims are true or false, reliable or misleading, flaky or fake. So how can we empower users to assess and evaluate digital communication, so that they can tell which standards it meets and which it flouts? That is the challenge which this book explores.




A Philosopher Looks at Digital Communication


Book Description

Explores how digital technologies have raised new ethical issues for communication.




A Philosopher Looks at Digital Communication


Book Description

"The ethics of communication is distinctive because communication includes a huge, complex and diverse range of activities that penetrate and shape every part of human life. All communication requires at least two parties -an originator and a recipient, or multiple originators and recipients-who must have specific and linkable capacities to satisfy and to recognise the many technical, ethical and epistemic standards that bear on communication"--




A Philosopher Looks at Friendship


Book Description

Philosophers often treat friendship as something systematic and earnest. For Chappell it is neither, yet still central to human experience.




A Philosopher Looks at Science


Book Description

What is science and what can it do? Nancy Cartwright here takes issue with three common images of science: that it amounts to the combination of theory and experiment; that all science is basically reducible to physics; and that science and the natural world which it pictures are deterministic. The author's innovative and thoughtful book draws on examples from the physical, life, and social sciences alike, and focuses on all the products of science – not just experiments or theories – and how they work together. She reveals just what it is that makes science ultimately reliable, and how this reliability is nevertheless still compatible with a view of nature as more responsive to human change than we might think. Her book is a call for greater intellectual humility by and within scientific institutions. It will have strong appeal to anyone who thinks about science and how it is practised in society.




A Philosopher Looks at the Religious Life


Book Description

A book rich in personal and practical wisdom pointing to the meaning of a religious life and its promised happiness.




A Philosopher Looks at Work


Book Description

A survey on the nature of work, integrating conceptual analysis, historical reflection, autobiography and social commentary.




A Philosopher Looks at Human Beings


Book Description

Considers why humans consider themselves superior to all other animals, and whether they are right to do so.




Political Theory of the Digital Age


Book Description

This book investigates how artificial intelligence might influence our political practices and ideas, and how we should respond.




Communicating Risk and Safety


Book Description

The world is wrought with risks that may harm people and cost lives. The news is riddled with reports of natural disasters (wildfires, floods, earthquakes, hurricanes), industrial disasters (chemical spills, water and air pollution), and health pandemics (e.g., SARS, H1NI, COVID19). Effective risk communication is critical to mitigating harms. The body of research in this handbook reveals the challenges of communicating such messages, affirms the need for dialogue, embraces the role of instruction in proactively communicating risk, acknowledges the function of competing risk messages, investigates the growing influence of new media, and constantly reconsiders the ethical imperative for communicating recommendations for enhanced safety.