Author name: Editor

The Battle for the Robot Soul

James K. Wight looks at how cultures define our views of machines. The word ‘robot’ first appeared in Karel Čapek’s 1921 play, Rossumovi Univerzální Roboti – Rossum’s Universal Robots. The word robota in Slavic languages translates as worker or serf, with the term implying mechanization and technology. Importantly, it is a man-made creation. Using the

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The Value of Friendship for Education

Robert Michael Ruehl calls for a friendly revolution. Western philosophers have enthusiastically praised friendship. A few intellectuals have raised doubts about it, such as Thomas Hobbes and Søren Kierkegaard, but friendship has inspired many others, including Aristotle, Francis Bacon, C.S. Lewis, and Mary E. Hunt, who have esteemed its benefits, especially the reciprocal commitment to

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Philosophy & Food

Are we what we eat? Feast your mind on the next few articles, says this issue’s editor Jeremy Iggers, philosopher and restaurant critic. “Know Thyself.”inscription at the oracle at Delphi. “You are what you eat.”American proverb. The inscription at Delphi challenged philosophers to explore the mystery of human identity, but several contributors to this issue

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