Living with Robots

Awards:   Short-listed for FAF Translation Prize 2018
Author:   Paul Dumouchel ,  Luisa Damiano ,  Malcolm DeBevoise
Publisher:   Harvard University Press
ISBN:  

9780674971738


Pages:   280
Publication Date:   06 November 2017
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   Out of stock   Availability explained
The supplier is temporarily out of stock of this item. It will be ordered for you on backorder and shipped when it becomes available.

Our Price $74.95 Quantity:  
Add to Cart

Share |

Living with Robots


Add your own review!

Awards

  • Short-listed for FAF Translation Prize 2018

Overview

Full Product Details

Author:   Paul Dumouchel ,  Luisa Damiano ,  Malcolm DeBevoise
Publisher:   Harvard University Press
Imprint:   Harvard University Press
ISBN:  

9780674971738


ISBN 10:   0674971736
Pages:   280
Publication Date:   06 November 2017
Audience:   Professional and scholarly ,  Professional & Vocational
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   Out of stock   Availability explained
The supplier is temporarily out of stock of this item. It will be ordered for you on backorder and shipped when it becomes available.
Language:   French

Table of Contents

Reviews

Designed to operate in an environment shaped, controlled, and occupied by us, robots are the new actors of a technical, social, and cultural transformation. Living with Robots is a timely and convincing reflection about the thrilling implications of the robot's presence in society, approaching robotics through different theoretical frameworks and analyzing the implications and ethical goals of interactions between humans and robots, between humans via robots, and between robots themselves.--Zaven Pare, Superior School of Industrial Design, Rio de Janeiro State University


A thoughtful and engaging discussion about an emerging area in applied ethics--social robotics... A timely and well-written volume that addresses many contemporary and future moral questions regarding how we treat artificial intelligence.--William Simkulet Library Journal (09/01/2017) Living with Robots is a convincing reflection on the increasing presence of robots in society. Designed to operate in an environment shaped and occupied by humans, robots are the new actors in a technical, social, and cultural transformation. The book offers a distinctive and fruitful approach to social robotics through different theoretical frameworks, analyzing the implications of interactions between humans and robots, between humans via robots, and between robots themselves.--Zaven Pare, Rio de Janeiro State University Living with Robots is a timely and fascinating examination of social robots that exist in the real world, have bodies, and interact with human beings. While addressing the practical functions of social robots, at its heart the book is deeply philosophical. The authors invite us to reflect on the nature of human beings, mind, and sociability, as well as the human-robot dynamics of emotional relationships. This gives rise to novel and important engagement with moral and political questions, from quality of life to military applications.--Takanori Shibata, National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology Living with Robots is a timely and convincing reflection on the increasing presence of robots in society. Designed to operate in an environment shaped and occupied by humans, robots are the new actors in a technical, social, and cultural transformation. The book offers a distinctive and fruitful approach to social robotics through different theoretical frameworks, analyzing the implications of interactions between humans and robots, between humans via robots, and between robots themselves.--Zaven Pare, Rio de Janeiro State University Designed to operate in an environment shaped, controlled, and occupied by us, robots are the new actors of a technical, social, and cultural transformation. Living with Robots is a timely and convincing reflection about the thrilling implications of the robot's presence in society, approaching robotics through different theoretical frameworks and analyzing the implications and ethical goals of interactions between humans and robots, between humans via robots, and between robots themselves.--Zaven Pare, Superior School of Industrial Design, Rio de Janeiro State University


A thoughtful and engaging discussion about an emerging area in applied ethics--social robotics... A timely and well-written volume that addresses many contemporary and future moral questions regarding how we treat artificial intelligence.--William Simkulet Library Journal (09/01/2017) Offers insight into problems raised by advances in robotics and artificial intelligence that will be faced by future societies. Throughout the book, the authors provide a conceptual framework for thinking about possible scenarios of human-robot interactions, most extensively with regard to our relationships with social robots... Living with Robots will meet various expectations, uniting the intellectual depth of a carefully documented academic treatise with the pleasure of a casual page-turner. Those in search of cultural erudition are provided with myriad references to books and movies, and those with a taste for technical novelty are treated to fascinating descriptions of the most hi-tech social robots.--Paula Quinon Science (11/10/2017) Living with Robots is a convincing reflection on the increasing presence of robots in society. Designed to operate in an environment shaped and occupied by humans, robots are the new actors in a technical, social, and cultural transformation. The book offers a distinctive and fruitful approach to social robotics through different theoretical frameworks, analyzing the implications of interactions between humans and robots, between humans via robots, and between robots themselves.--Zaven Pare, Rio de Janeiro State University Living with Robots is a timely and fascinating examination of social robots that exist in the real world, have bodies, and interact with human beings. While addressing the practical functions of social robots, at its heart the book is deeply philosophical. The authors invite us to reflect on the nature of human beings, mind, and sociability, as well as the human-robot dynamics of emotional relationships. This gives rise to novel and important engagement with moral and political questions, from quality of life to military applications.--Takanori Shibata, National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology Living with Robots is a timely and convincing reflection on the increasing presence of robots in society. Designed to operate in an environment shaped and occupied by humans, robots are the new actors in a technical, social, and cultural transformation. The book offers a distinctive and fruitful approach to social robotics through different theoretical frameworks, analyzing the implications of interactions between humans and robots, between humans via robots, and between robots themselves.--Zaven Pare, Rio de Janeiro State University Designed to operate in an environment shaped, controlled, and occupied by us, robots are the new actors of a technical, social, and cultural transformation. Living with Robots is a timely and convincing reflection about the thrilling implications of the robot's presence in society, approaching robotics through different theoretical frameworks and analyzing the implications and ethical goals of interactions between humans and robots, between humans via robots, and between robots themselves.--Zaven Pare, Superior School of Industrial Design, Rio de Janeiro State University


[Dumouchel and Damiano's] book takes us on a detailed tour of the philosophy of artificial intelligence (AI)--especially as it applies to robots intended to build social relationships with humanity. This is a work of serious scholarship, with arguments about identity, authority, autonomy and what is termed 'artificial empathy' presented with reference to a range of example systems. Kant, Descartes, Hobbes and other philosophical heavyweights get the exposure you might expect, but when set alongside the views of such disparate players as psychologist Jean Piaget and science-fiction writer Algis Budrys the analysis offers considerable breadth...If we are to build a robust, appropriate ethical structure around the next generation of technical development--some combination of deep learning, artificial intelligence, robotics and artificial empathy--we need to understand that managing the impact of these technologies is far too important to be left to those who are enthusiastically engaged in producing them. This book is both a comprehensive, engaging review of philosophical thought and a warning to anyone who thinks that the integration of robotics into our society is about technology alone.-- (01/25/2018) A very substantial philosophical study.--Philosophie Magazine One should not lose sight of the prospective and speculative aspect of the research and ideas of Dumouchel and Damiano. But their work is nevertheless remarkably profound and intelligent, and it provides us, as do all serious inquiries into robotics, with a better understanding of ourselves, especially the social aspect of our minds. Even if one might doubt that social robots could ever decipher the incredible complexity of our feelings and adapt to them, this project nevertheless represents a fascinating step, less in robotics itself than in the quest for the human mind to understand itself.--Le Temps A thoughtful and engaging discussion about an emerging area in applied ethics--social robotics... A timely and well-written volume that addresses many contemporary and future moral questions regarding how we treat artificial intelligence.--William Simkulet Library Journal (09/01/2017) Living with Robots is a timely and fascinating examination of social robots that exist in the real world, have bodies, and interact with human beings. While addressing the practical functions of social robots, at its heart the book is deeply philosophical. The authors invite us to reflect on the nature of human beings, mind, and sociability, as well as the human-robot dynamics of emotional relationships. This gives rise to novel and important engagement with moral and political questions, from quality of life to military applications.--Takanori Shibata, National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology Living with Robots is a convincing reflection on the increasing presence of robots in society. Designed to operate in an environment shaped and occupied by humans, robots are the new actors in a technical, social, and cultural transformation. The book offers a distinctive and fruitful approach to social robotics through different theoretical frameworks, analyzing the implications of interactions between humans and robots, between humans via robots, and between robots themselves.--Zaven Pare, Rio de Janeiro State University Offers insight into problems raised by advances in robotics and artificial intelligence that will be faced by future societies. Throughout the book, the authors provide a conceptual framework for thinking about possible scenarios of human-robot interactions, most extensively with regard to our relationships with social robots... Living with Robots will meet various expectations, uniting the intellectual depth of a carefully documented academic treatise with the pleasure of a casual page-turner. Those in search of cultural erudition are provided with myriad references to books and movies, and those with a taste for technical novelty are treated to fascinating descriptions of the most hi-tech social robots.-- (11/10/2017)


Author Information

Paul Dumouchel is Full Professor of Philosophy at the Graduate School of Core Ethics and Frontier Sciences at Ritsumeikan University in Kyoto, Japan. Luisa Damiano is Associate Professor of Logic and Philosophy of Science at the University of Messina in Messina, Italy.

Tab Content 6

Author Website:  

Customer Reviews

Recent Reviews

No review item found!

Add your own review!

Countries Available

All regions
Latest Reading Guide

MRG2025CC

 

Shopping Cart
Your cart is empty
Shopping cart
Mailing List