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Carregando... The Matrix and Philosophy: Welcome to the Desert of the Real (Popular Culture and Philosophy)de William Irwin (Editor)
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Registre-se no LibraryThing tpara descobrir se gostará deste livro. Ainda não há conversas na Discussão sobre este livro. At least a philosophy book which is human-readable and fun ! This is the purpose of this collection : to bring philosophy to people outside of the academic milieu. I think this is achieved : I read it. And while reading it, it gave me planty of reference that my studies in "education nationale" failed to bring to me. I a eager to grab another one of this series. I did not really expect a lot, and I was not disappointed. There are a couple of good essays in here that provide some useful background material on philosophical references in the movie. For example, I had not realized that "know thyself" was written over the entrance to the abode of the oracle at Delphi. (I should probably be embarrassed to admit that.) But the majority of the essays reinforce my suspicion that philosophy has lost its purpose. It seems that most everything of value in philosophy has been taken over by math or science, whether it be cosmology, logic, or artificial intelligence. The philosophers in this volume are right, at least, to pick out consciousness as a key presumptive difference between mechanical minds and human experience, but unfortunately none of them shed much light on the matter. sem resenhas | adicionar uma resenha
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The Matrix conveys the horror of a false world made of nothing but perceptions. Based on the premise that reality is a dream controlled by malevolent forces, it is one of the most overtly philosophical movies ever to come out of Hollywood. These thought-provoking essays by the same team of young philosophers who createdThe Simpsons and Philosophy discuss different facets of the primary philosophical puzzle of The Matrix: Can we be sure the world is really there, and if not, what should we do about it? Other chapters address issues of religion, lifestyle, pop culture, the Zeitgeist, the nature of mind and matter, and the reality of fiction. Não foram encontradas descrições de bibliotecas. |
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1) Solipsism represented by the idea of the brain in the jar. The only thing which exists is yourself. Other people and world around you don't exist and hence your interactions are meaningless with no moral consequences;
2) What I'll refer to as shared solipsism represented by something like the Matrix where most of the people are actually real (though there may be some who are simulated characters you can't generally distinguish them from real people without breaking out of the simulation). The world that these people inhabit though is a simulation. Actions in that simulated world may effect other people at least mentally hence actions taken in that world have moral consequences;
3) True simulation theory. All the people and the world that they inhabit is simulated. This includes yourself who would be something like a piece of software code with a limited self-awareness running on some hardware in a "real world" somewhere. (Which of course could itself be a simulation running on some higher level hardware in a higher level world ad infinitum). From the higher/real worlds perspective the interactions of the characters in the simulated world have no more moral meaning than characters in a computer game shooting each other. However since your code within the game is self-aware it makes sense to assume the same is true of other characters in the simulation and hence your actions in the simulation as far as you are able to control them have moral consequences from your point of view.
The subject is interesting though. It could have properly examined Philip K. Dick’s theories and how they stack up against questions of fundamental reality across the world’s religions and philosophies. ( )