Mind and Machine. The New Spaces of Robots and Digitization
dc.contributor.author | Janz, Bruce B. | |
dc.contributor.author | Schmiljun, André | |
dc.date.accessioned | 2019-11-28T08:43:33Z | |
dc.date.available | 2019-11-28T08:43:33Z | |
dc.date.issued | 2019 | |
dc.description | The article was copy-edited by a native speaker, Stephen Dersley, with the translation supported by the grant 261/WCN/2019/1 “Wsparcie dla Czasopism Naukowych” (2019-2020) in order to promote original Polish research worldwide. | pl |
dc.description.abstract | Machines have always been a tool or technical instrument for human beings to facilitate and to accelerate processes through mechanical power. The same applies to robots nowadays – the next step in the evolution of machines. Over the course of the last few years, robot usage in society has expanded enormously, and they now carry out a remarkable number of tasks for us. It seems we are on the eve of a historic revolution that will change everything we know right now. But not only robots have an impact on our life. It is digitization in its entirety, including smart applications and games, that confronts us with new spaces. This special volume of Ethics in Progress tries to broaden our understanding of a philosophical field – robots and digitization – that is still in its infancy in terms of it research and literature. | pl |
dc.description.sponsorship | MNiSW grant 261/ WCN/2019/1 “Wsparcie dla Czasopism Naukowych” | pl |
dc.identifier.citation | Ethics in Progress, Volume 10 (2019), Issue 2, pp. 4-7. | pl |
dc.identifier.doi | https://doi.org/10.14746/eip.2019.2.1 | |
dc.identifier.issn | 2084-9257 | |
dc.identifier.uri | http://hdl.handle.net/10593/25191 | |
dc.language.iso | eng | pl |
dc.publisher | Wydział Filozoficzny UAM | pl |
dc.rights | info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess | pl |
dc.rights.uri | An error occurred getting the license - uri. | * |
dc.subject | robot | pl |
dc.subject | robot ethics | pl |
dc.subject | machine ethics | pl |
dc.subject | moral competence | pl |
dc.subject | robot morality | pl |
dc.subject | artificial morality | pl |
dc.subject | moral implementation | pl |
dc.subject | care robots | pl |
dc.subject | social robots | pl |
dc.subject | anthropomorphism | pl |
dc.subject | uncanny valley | pl |
dc.subject | digitization | pl |
dc.subject | digital games | pl |
dc.subject | smart applications | pl |
dc.subject | people with disabilities | pl |
dc.subject | microphotography | pl |
dc.subject | Adam Snerg-Wiśniewski | pl |
dc.subject | Georg Lind | pl |
dc.subject | Matthias Scheutz | pl |
dc.subject | Isaac Asimov | pl |
dc.subject | Wendell Wallach | pl |
dc.subject | Colin Allen | pl |
dc.subject | Bertram F. Malle | pl |
dc.title | Mind and Machine. The New Spaces of Robots and Digitization | pl |
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- Machines have always been a tool or technical instrument for human beings to facilitate and to accelerate processes through mechanical power. The same applies to robots nowadays – the next step in the evolution of machines. Over the course of the last few years, robot usage in society has expanded enormously, and they now carry out a remarkable number of tasks for us. It seems we are on the eve of a historic revolution that will change everything we know right now. But not only robots have an impact on our life. It is digitization in its entirety, including smart applications and games, that confronts us with new spaces. This special volume of Ethics in Progress tries to broaden our understanding of a philosophical field – robots and digitization – that is still in its infancy in terms of it research and literature.
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