Cover image for Philip K. Dick and Philosophy : Do Androids Have Kindred Spirits?.
Philip K. Dick and Philosophy : Do Androids Have Kindred Spirits?.
Title:
Philip K. Dick and Philosophy : Do Androids Have Kindred Spirits?.
Author:
Wittkower, D. E.
ISBN:
9780812697391
Personal Author:
Physical Description:
1 online resource (329 pages)
Series:
Popular Culture and Philosophy
Contents:
Table of Precognitions -- Through a Screen Darkly -- 01 Hollywood Doesn't Know Dick -- 02 A Quintessence of Dust -- 03 Dick Doesn't Do Heroes -- 04 Ewe, Robot -- Identity Crises -- 05 Just Who and How Many Do You Think You Are? -- 06 Will You Survive a Trip to Rekall, Inc.? -- 07 Scan Thyself -- 08 Human or Machine, Does It Mind or Matter? -- Soul Against the Archons -- 09 Matt Damon Is a Vast Sinister Conspiracy -- 10 How to Build a Democracy that Doesn't Fall Apart Two Hundred Years Later -- 11 We Can Manipulate You Wholesale -- 12 Grow, My Dears, the Eugenicist Said -- The World Is Fake -- 13 Things Are Seldom What They Seem -- 14 Trauma of the Real -- 15 Lies, Incorporated -- 16 The Blob Necessitates -- 17 The Gnosis of 2-3-74 -- Ay, There's the Wub -- 18 Replicating Morality -- 19 Public Relations Guide For New Officers Division Of Precrime -- 20 If the Universe Isn't Real, How Should We Treat Other People? -- Puppets and Precogs -- 21 Knowing Tomorrow While Choosing Today -- 22 Total Recall's Total Rethink -- 23 Lonely Wolves -- Futurity Doctored -- 24 I Know What You Did Next Summer -- 25 Untimely Speculations -- 26 The Day Roosevelt Was Assassinated -- 27 Time in Unfixed Are You -- Briefings -- 28 "Autofac" -- 29 "King of the Elves" -- 30 "The Golden Man" -- 31 "Piper in the Woods" -- 32 "The Exit Door Leads In" -- 33 "The Gun" -- The Master's Own Voice -- 34 Beyond Lies the Wub -- 35 The Eyes Have It -- Skin-Jobs -- Index.
Abstract:
Science fiction writer Philip K. Dick (1928-1982) is the giant imagination behind so much recent popular culture-both movies directly based on his writings, such as Blade Runner (based on the novel Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep?), Total Recall, Minority Report, and The Adjustment Bureau plus cult favorites such as A Scanner Darkly, Imposter, Next, Screamers, and Paycheck and works revealing his powerful influence, such as The Matrix and Inception. With the publication in 2011 of volume 1 of Exegesis, his journal of spiritual visions and paranoic investigations, Dick is fast becoming a major influence in the world of popular spirituality and occult thinking. In Philip K. Dick and Philosophy thirty Dick fans and professional thinkers confront the fascinating and frightening ideas raised by Dick's mind-blowing fantasies. Is there an alien world behind the everyday reality we experience? If androids can pass as human, should they be given the same consideration as humans? Do psychotics have insights into a mystical reality? Would knowledge of the future free us or enslave us? This volume will also include Dick's short story "Adjustment Team," on which The Adjustment Bureau is based. Philip K. Dick and Philosophy explores the ideas of Philip K. Dick in the same way that he did: with an earnest desire to understand the truth of the world, but without falsely equating earnestness with a dry seriousness. Dick's work was replete with whimsical and absurdist presentations of the greatest challenges to reason and to humanity-paradox, futility, paranoia, and failure-and even at his darkest times he was able to keep some perspective and humor, as for example in choosing to name himself 'Horselover Fat' in VALIS at the same time as he relates his personal religious epiphanies, crises, and delusions. With the same earnest whimsy, we approach Philip K.

Dick as a philosopher like ourselves-one who wrote almost entirely in thought-experiments and semi-fictional world-building, but who engaged with many of the greatest questions of philosophy throughout the Euro-American tradition. Philip K. Dick and Philosophy has much to offer for both serious fans and those who have recently learned his name, and realized that his work has been the inspiration for several well-known and thought-provoking films. Most chapters start with one or more of the movies based on Dick's writing. From here, the authors delve deeper into the issues by bringing in philosophers' perspectives and by bringing in Dick's written work. The book invites the reader with a casual familiarity with Dick to get to know his work, and invites the reader with little familiarity with philosophy to learn more. New perspectives and challenging connections and interpretations for even the most hard-core Dick fans are also offered.  To maximize public interest, the book prominently addresses the most widely-known films, as well as those with the most significant fan followings: Blade Runner, Total Recall, Minority Report, A Scanner Darkly, and The Adjustment Bureau. Along with these "big five" films, a few chapters address his last novels, especially VALIS, which have a significant cult following of their own. There are also chapters which address short stories and novels which are currently planned for adaptation: Radio Free Albemuth (film completed, awaiting distribution), The Man in the High Castle (in development by Ridley Scott for BBC mini-series), and "King of the Elves" (Disney, planned for release in 2012).
Local Note:
Electronic reproduction. Ann Arbor, Michigan : ProQuest Ebook Central, 2017. Available via World Wide Web. Access may be limited to ProQuest Ebook Central affiliated libraries.
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