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Blade Runner 2049 and Philosophy - This Breaks the World (Paperback)
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Blade Runner 2049 and Philosophy - This Breaks the World (Paperback)
Series: Popular Culture and Philosophy, 127
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List price R451
Loot Price R382
Discovery Miles 3 820
You Save R69 (15%)
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Blade Runner 2049 is a 2017 sequel to the 1982 movie Blade Runner,
about a world in which some human-looking replicants have become
dangerous, so that other human-looking replicants, as well as
humans, have the job of hunting down the dangerous models and
"retiring" (destroying) them. Both films have been widely hailed as
among the greatest science-fiction movies of all time, and Ridley
Scott, director of the original Blade Runner, has announced that
there will be a third Blade Runner movie. Blade Runner 2049 and
Philosophy is a collection of entertaining articles on both Blade
Runner movies (and on the spin-off short films and Blade Runner
novels) by twenty philosophers representing diverse backgrounds and
philosophical perspectives. Among the issues addressed in the book:
What does Blade Runner 2049 tell us about the interactions of state
power and corporate power? Can machines ever become truly
conscious, or will they always lack some essential human qualities?
The most popular theory of personhood says that a person is defined
by their memories, so what happens when memories can be
manufactured and inserted at will? We already interact with
non-human decision-makers via the Internet. When embodied AI
becomes reality, how can we know what is human and what is
simulation? Does it matter? Do AI-endowed human-looking replicants
have civil and political rights, or can they be destroyed whenever
"real" humans decide they are inconvenient? The blade runner
Deckard (Harrison Ford) appears in both movies, and is generally
assumed to be human, but some claim he may be a replicant. What's
the evidence on both sides? Is Niander Wallace
(the-mad-scientist-cum-evil-corporate-CEO in Blade Runner 2049)
himself a replicant? What motivates him? What are the impacts of
decision-making AI entities on the world of business? Both Blade
Runner and Blade Runner 2049 have been praised for their hauntingly
beautiful depictions of a bleak future, but the two futures are
very different (and the 2019 future imagined in the original Blade
Runner is considerably different from the actual world of 2019).
How have our expectations and visions of the future changed between
the two movies? The "dream maker" character Ana Stelline in Blade
Runner 2049 has a small but pivotal role. What are the implications
of a person whose dedicated mission and task is to invent and
install false memories? What are the social and psychological
implications of human-AI sexual relations?
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