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Can Animals and Machines Be Persons?: A Dialogue

Autor Justin Leiber
en Limba Engleză Paperback – 14 mar 1985
"This is a dialogue about the notion of a person, of an entity that thinks and feels and acts, that counts and is accountable. Equivalently, it's about the intentional idiom --the well-knit fabric of terms that we use to characterize persons. Human beings are usually persons (a brain-dead human might be considered a human but not a person). However, there may be persons, in various senses, that are not human beings. Much recent discussion has focused on hypothetical computer-robots and on actual nonhuman great apes. The discussion here is naturalistic, which is to say that count and accountability are, at least initially, presumed to be naturally well-knit with the possession of a cognitive and affective life." --Justin Leiber, from the Introduction
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9780872200029
ISBN-10: 0872200027
Pagini: 88
Dimensiuni: 9 x 215 x 139 mm
Greutate: 0.14 kg
Editura: Hackett Publishing Company
Colecția Hackett Publishing Company, Inc (US)
Locul publicării:United States

Recenzii

This is a dialogue about the notion of a person, of an entity that thinks and feels and acts, that counts and is accountable. Equivalently, it's about the intentional idiom --the well-knit fabric of terms that we use to characterize persons. Human beings are usually persons (a brain-dead human might be considered a human but not a person). However, there may be persons, in various senses, that are not human beings. Much recent discussion has focused on hypothetical computer-robots and on actual nonhuman great apes. The discussion here is naturalistic, which is to say that count and accountability are, at least initially, presumed to be naturally well-knit with the possession of a cognitive and affective life. --Justin Leiber, from the Introduction
A delightful book, beautifully written and psychologically acute. --Peter T. Manicas, Queens College, CUNY
Written in a lively and entertaining style, this little book, which deals with topics such as 'personhood,' animal rights, and artificial intelligence . . . makes some rather difficult philosophical points clear in an unpedantic fashion. --M. E. Winston, Trenton State College