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  • Title: Ethics for a Digital Age

    Ethics for a Digital Age

    by Bastiaan Vanacker (Volume editor) Don Heider (Volume editor) 2016
    ©2016 Textbook
  • Title: Ethics for a Digital Age, Vol. II

    Ethics for a Digital Age, Vol. II

    by Bastiaan Vanacker (Volume editor) Don Heider (Volume editor) 2018
    ©2018 Textbook
  • Title: Patents, Pills, and the Press

    Patents, Pills, and the Press

    The Rise and Fall of the Global HIV/AIDS Medicines Crisis in the News
    by Thomas Owen (Author) 2014
    ©2015 Monographs
  • Title: Br(e)aking the News

    Br(e)aking the News

    Journalism, Politics and New Media
    by Janey Gordon (Volume editor) Paul Rowinski (Volume editor) Gavin Stewart (Volume editor) 2013
    ©2013 Edited Collection
  • Title: Digital Wellbeing

    Digital Wellbeing

    Implications for Psychological Research
    by Dana Rad (Volume editor) Valentina Emilia Balas (Volume editor) Vasile Doru Marineanu (Volume editor) Roxana Maier (Volume editor) 2021
    ©2021 Conference proceedings
  • San Francisco State University Series in Philosophy

    ISSN: 1067-0017

    This series is designed to encourage philosophers to explore new directions of research in philosophy. The underlying premise of the series is that contemporary philosophical research is impeded by an understanding of the intellectual division of labor according to which philosophy is conceived of as separate from the natural and social sciences, the arts and humanistic disciplines. Science is impoverished by the neglect of immediate attention to the metaphysical and moral questions posed by scientific developments. The arts and humanistic disciplines are also impoverished by a lack of sufficient attention to the philosophical implication of innovation in each of these areas. Philosophy for its part is in danger of grinding away on outdated problems posed by the scientific and artistic developments of past centuries. The usual remedy for this situation, inter-disciplinary work, typically falls far short of the needed re-integration of philosophy, the sciences, the arts and humanistic disciplines. The pressing problems of contemporary civilization, particularly the problems that concern the relationship between science, technology and ethical and political values, we believe, can only be adequately explored by a re-integration of philosophy with other fields. This series seeks to call attention to itself by meeting high standards of scholarship and producing work of unquestionable merit. Works in this series should contribute to the re-integration of philosophy with the natural and social sciences, technology, the arts or humanities by challenging philosophical preconceptions that block the re-integration of philosophy with other disciplines. This series is designed to encourage philosophers to explore new directions of research in philosophy. The underlying premise of the series is that contemporary philosophical research is impeded by an understanding of the intellectual division of labor according to which philosophy is conceived of as separate from the natural and social sciences, the arts and humanistic disciplines. Science is impoverished by the neglect of immediate attention to the metaphysical and moral questions posed by scientific developments. The arts and humanistic disciplines are also impoverished by a lack of sufficient attention to the philosophical implication of innovation in each of these areas. Philosophy for its part is in danger of grinding away on outdated problems posed by the scientific and artistic developments of past centuries. The usual remedy for this situation, inter-disciplinary work, typically falls far short of the needed re-integration of philosophy, the sciences, the arts and humanistic disciplines. The pressing problems of contemporary civilization, particularly the problems that concern the relationship between science, technology and ethical and political values, we believe, can only be adequately explored by a re-integration of philosophy with other fields. This series seeks to call attention to itself by meeting high standards of scholarship and producing work of unquestionable merit. Works in this series should contribute to the re-integration of philosophy with the natural and social sciences, technology, the arts or humanities by challenging philosophical preconceptions that block the re-integration of philosophy with other disciplines. This series is designed to encourage philosophers to explore new directions of research in philosophy. The underlying premise of the series is that contemporary philosophical research is impeded by an understanding of the intellectual division of labor according to which philosophy is conceived of as separate from the natural and social sciences, the arts and humanistic disciplines. Science is impoverished by the neglect of immediate attention to the metaphysical and moral questions posed by scientific developments. The arts and humanistic disciplines are also impoverished by a lack of sufficient attention to the philosophical implication of innovation in each of these areas. Philosophy for its part is in danger of grinding away on outdated problems posed by the scientific and artistic developments of past centuries. The usual remedy for this situation, inter-disciplinary work, typically falls far short of the needed re-integration of philosophy, the sciences, the arts and humanistic disciplines. The pressing problems of contemporary civilization, particularly the problems that concern the relationship between science, technology and ethical and political values, we believe, can only be adequately explored by a re-integration of philosophy with other fields. This series seeks to call attention to itself by meeting high standards of scholarship and producing work of unquestionable merit. Works in this series should contribute to the re-integration of philosophy with the natural and social sciences, technology, the arts or humanities by challenging philosophical preconceptions that block the re-integration of philosophy with other disciplines.

    9 publications

  • Title: Whither China? Its Cultural Destiny

    Whither China? Its Cultural Destiny

    by Liang Shuming (Author) 2023
    ©2023 Monographs
  • Title: Living in God Without God

    Living in God Without God

    ©2016 Monographs
  • Title: Moral Talk Across the Lifespan

    Moral Talk Across the Lifespan

    Creating Good Relationships
    by Vince Waldron (Volume editor) Douglas Kelley (Volume editor) 2015
    ©2015 Textbook
  • Title: Aesthetic Transformations

    Aesthetic Transformations

    Taking Nietzsche at His Word
    by Thomas Jovanovski (Author)
    ©2008 Monographs
  • Title: Journalists and Media Accountability

    Journalists and Media Accountability

    An International Study of News People in the Digital Age
    by Susanne Fengler (Volume editor) Tobias Eberwein (Volume editor) Gianpietro Mazzoleni (Volume editor) Colin Porlezza (Volume editor) 2013
    ©2014 Monographs
  • Title: Italian Yearbook of Human Rights 2016

    Italian Yearbook of Human Rights 2016

    by Centro di Ateneo per i Diritti Umani (Volume editor) 2016
    ©2016 Edited Collection
  • Title: From Humanism to Meta-, Post- and Transhumanism?

    From Humanism to Meta-, Post- and Transhumanism?

    by Irina Deretić (Volume editor) Stefan Lorenz Sorgner (Volume editor) 2015
    ©2016 Edited Collection
  • Title: The Early Sartre and Marxism

    The Early Sartre and Marxism

    by Sam Coombes (Author)
    ©2008 Monographs
  • Title: Postcolonial Violence, Culture and Identity in Francophone Africa and the Antilles

    Postcolonial Violence, Culture and Identity in Francophone Africa and the Antilles

    by Lorna Milne (Volume editor)
    ©2007 Conference proceedings
  • Title: Preventing Nuclear Genocide

    Preventing Nuclear Genocide

    Essays on Peace and War
    by George H. Hampsch (Author)
    ©1988 Others
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