Ethics in Cyberspace: How Cyberspace May Influence Interpersonal Interaction

Author:   Thomas Ploug
Publisher:   Springer
Edition:   2009 ed.
ISBN:  

9789048123698


Pages:   223
Publication Date:   15 May 2009
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   Awaiting stock   Availability explained
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Ethics in Cyberspace: How Cyberspace May Influence Interpersonal Interaction


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Overview

Over the last few decades information and communication technology has come to play an increasingly prominent role in our dealings with other people. Computers, in particular, have made available a host of new ways of interacting, which we have increasingly made use of. In the wake of this development a number of ethical questions have been raised and debated. Ethics in Cyberspace focuses on the consequences for ethical agency of mediating interaction by means of computers, seeking to clarify how the conditions of certain kinds of interaction in cyberspace (for example, in chat-rooms and virtual worlds) differ from the conditions of interaction face-to-face and how these differences may come to affect the behaviour of interacting agents in terms of ethics.

Full Product Details

Author:   Thomas Ploug
Publisher:   Springer
Imprint:   Springer
Edition:   2009 ed.
Dimensions:   Width: 15.50cm , Height: 2.50cm , Length: 23.50cm
Weight:   0.567kg
ISBN:  

9789048123698


ISBN 10:   9048123690
Pages:   223
Publication Date:   15 May 2009
Audience:   Professional and scholarly ,  Professional & Vocational
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   Awaiting stock   Availability explained
The supplier is currently out of stock of this item. It will be ordered for you and placed on backorder. Once it does come back in stock, we will ship it out for you.

Table of Contents

Preface I The basic premise 1 Ethics in Cyberspace 1.1 Introduction 1.1.1 The Face of the Other 1.1.2 The 'Legal Tender' experiment 1.1.3 Explaining the basic premise 1.1.4 Road-map 2 The basic premise revisited 2.1 Shortcomings of the basic premise 2.1.1 The kind of mediation 2.1.2 The character of actions contrasted 2.1.3 Coincidental difference in interaction 2.1.4 Qualitative identity of situations 2.2 The basic premise 2.2.1 Restating the basic premise 2.2.2 Exploration of the basic premise II Action, explanation and cyberspace 3 Actions and explanations 3.1 Actions and reasons 3.1.1 'The moral problem' 3.1.2 A Humean theory of motivation 3.1.3 Internalism in relation to normative reasons 3.1.4 Pure cognitivist internalism 3.2 Explaining the basic premise 3.2.1 The role of beliefs in explanation 3.2.2 The role of ontological conditions in explanation 3.2.3 Explanatory model 4 Interaction in Cyberspace 4.1 Cyberspace | Infrastructure and interaction 4.1.1 Conceptual computers and digital electronic machines 4.1.2 Defining Cyberspace | virtuality and interaction 4.1.3 Specific kinds of interaction in Cyberspace 4.2 Key properties of cyberspatial interaction 4.2.1 Limited exchange of data and information 4.2.2 Limited sensory access 4.2.3 Extensive anonymity 4.2.4 Logical relationship between key properties III Explaining the basic premise 5 Belief and particularity 5.1 Structure of analysis 5.2 The three hypotheses 5.2.1 Being convinced to a certain extent 5.2.2 The reality of the patient 5.2.3 Reliable and relevant evidence 6 Belief and reality 6.1 Hypothesis I | Reality and determinateness 6.1.1 Determinateness and determinedness 6.1.2 Belief, reality and determinateness 6.2 Hypothesis II | Reality, causality and life-world 6.2.1 Causality and life-world 6.2.2 Belief, reality and causality 6.2.3 Belief, reality and life-world 6.3 Hypothesis III | Reality and vulnerability 6.3.1 Vulnerability and dependency 6.3.2 Belief, reality and vulnerability 6.4 Hypotheses I-III | Beliefs and evidence 6.4.1 Linking beliefs and evidence 7 Belief and evidence 7.1 Evidence in cyberspatial interaction 7.1.1 Lack of evidence 7.1.2 Lack of relevant evidence 7.1.3 Lack of reliable evidence 8 Belief and action 8.1 Belief, reality and ethics 8.1.1 Belief, reality and motivation 8.1.2 The particularity of moral concern 8.2 Explaining the moral difference in interaction 8.2.1 Foundation for explaining 8.2.2 Explaining 8.2.3 Revisiting sources of inspiration 9 A few concluding comments 9.1 Alternative explanations and interpretations Bibliography

Reviews

From the reviews: This book will interest students of modern ethics, psychology, and the human factors of cyberspace. ! Ploug's work is best suited for a graduate seminar. ! if there is a need for face time in ethics and human interactions, this book is a valuable first step. (Brad Reid, ACM Computing Reviews, October, 2009) A book on the ethics of interactions in cyberspace is both timely and important. ! written in three sections, nine chapters and is designed to appeal to different readerships. ! Ploug ! more interested in ethical theory. His interest is in the logical relationships between different properties in cyberspace, how we establish and act on our beliefs about others, our beliefs about the world ! . To my mind, these are all important questions of epistemology, including for phenomenologists. (Erich von Dietze, Metapsychology Online Reviews, Vol. 14 (12), March, 2010)


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