Digital Whoness : Identity, Privacy and Freedom in the Cyberworld.
The first aim is to provide well-articulated concepts by thinking through elementary phenomena of today's world, focusing on privacy and the digital, to clarify who we are in the cyberworld - hence a phenomenology of digital whoness. The second aim is to engage critically, hermeneutically with...
Clasificación: | Libro Electrónico |
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Autor principal: | |
Otros Autores: | , |
Formato: | Electrónico eBook |
Idioma: | Inglés |
Publicado: |
Berlin :
De Gruyter,
2013.
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Temas: | |
Acceso en línea: | Texto completo |
Tabla de Contenidos:
- Acknowledgement; 0 Introduction; 0.1 The significance of a phenomenology of whoness as the startingpoint for discussing the question concerning privacy and freedom in the internet; 0.2 A provisional stocktaking of the discussion in information ethics on privacy and freedom in the internet age; 0.3 Course of the investigation; 1 Phenomenology of whoness: identity, privacy, trust and freedom; 1.1 The trace of whoness starts with the Greeks; 1.2 Selfhood as an identification with reflections from the world; 1.3 Values, ethos, ethics.
- 1.4 The question concerning rights: personal privacy, trust and intimacy1.5 The private individual, liberty, private property (Locke); 1.6 The private individual and private property as a mode of reified sociation: the gainful game (classical political economy, Marx); 1.7 Trust as the gainful game's element and the privacy of private property; 1.8 Justice and state protection of privacy; 1.9 Kant's free autonomous subject and privatio in the use of reason; 1.10 Privacy as protection of individual autonomy
- On Rössler's The Value of Privacy; 1.11 Arendt on whoness in the world.
- 1.11.1 Arendt's discovery of the plurality of whos in The Human Condition1.11.2 The question concerning whoness as the key question of social ontology; 1.11.3 The untenability of the distinction between labour, work and action; 1.11.4 Whoness and the gainful game; 1.11.5 Public and private realms?; 1.12 Recapitulation and outlook; 2 Digital ontology; 2.1 From the abstraction from physical beings to their digital representation; 2.2 Mathematical access to the movement of physical beings; 2.3 The mathematical conception of linear, continuous time.
- 2.4 Outsourcing of the arithmologos as digital code2.5 The parallel cyberworld that fits like a glove; 2.5.1 Cyberspace; 2.5.2 Cybertime; 3 Digital whoness in connection with privacy, publicness and freedom; 3.1 Digital identity
- a number?; 3.2 Digital privacy: personal freedom to reveal and conceal; 3.3 Protection of private property in the cyberworld; 3.4 Cyber-publicness; 3.5 Freedom in the cyberworld; 3.5.1 The cyberworld frees itself first of all; 3.5.2 The gainful game unleashes its freedom in the cyberworld; 3.5.3 Human freedom in the cyberworld.
- 3.6 Assessing Tavani's review of theories and issues concerning personal privacy3.7 An appraisal of Nissenbaum's Privacy in Context; 3.8 Floridi's metaphysics of the threefold-encapsulated subject in a world conceived as infosphere; 3.8.1 The purported "informational nature of personal identity"; 3.8.2 Floridi's purportedly "ontological interpretation of informational privacy"; 3.9 On Charles Ess' appraisal of Floridi's information ethics; 3.9.1 Informational ontology; 3.9.2 Informational privacy; 3.9.3 Getting over the subject-object split.