Introducing Philosophy Through Pop Culture. Группа авторов

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Название Introducing Philosophy Through Pop Culture
Автор произведения Группа авторов
Жанр Философия
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Издательство Философия
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isbn 9781119757184



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Marginalized knowers who are victims of epistemic injustice find it difficult to be believed when they should be, or to make their experiences salient to others through language and culture.21 As I've described, one way to make experiences salient to others is to produce fictions like Black Panther, which represent experiences and offer the epistemic resources to allow knowers to correctly interpret experience. The historic lack of adequate resources for interpreting and understanding Black culture, possibilities, and experience, leads to these aspects of living as a Black person in the world becoming obscured or poorly understood by other people. Moreover, because the resources available to understand Black lives are largely stereotypical or derivative, so too is much subsequent understanding of Black culture and experience.

      For pop culture resources and philosophical resources related to this chapter please visit the website for this book: https://introducingphilosophythroughpopculture.com.

      Notes

      1 1 Bell, B.A. (2020). Actors on Actors: Anthony Mackie & Daveed Diggs (Full Conversation). Variety. https://variety.com/video/actors‐on‐actors‐anthony‐mackie‐daveed‐diggs‐full‐conversation#! (June 28, 2020).

      2 2 Pohlhaus Jr., G. (2012). Relational knowing and epistemic injustice: toward a theory of willful hermeneutical ignorance. Hypatia 27: 716 .

      3 3 Pohlhaus (2012), 716.

      4 4 Pohlhaus (2012), 718.

      5 5 Pohlhaus (2012), 718.

      6 6 Gaile Pohlhaus Jr . (2017). Varieties of epistemic injustice. In: The Routledge Handbook of Epistemic Injustice (eds. I.J. Kidd, J. Medina, and G. Pohlhaus Jr. ), 16. New York: Routledge .

      7 7 Walton, K. (1990). Mimesis as Make‐Believe . Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press .

      8 8 Mackenzie, C. (2000). Imagining oneself otherwise. In: Relational Autonomy: Feminist Perspectives on Autonomy, Agency, and the Social Self (eds. C. Mackenzie and N. Stoljar ), 132. Oxford: Oxford University Press.

      9 9 Mackenzie, 126.

      10 10 Mackenzie, 126.

      11 11 Mackenzie, 126.

      12 12 Mackenzie, 133.

      13 13 Thompson‐Hernández, W. (2018). Black Panther’ Cosplayers: “We're Helping People See Us as Heroes”. New York Times. (https://www.nytimes.com/2018/02/15/style/black‐panther‐movie‐cosplay.html (February 15, 2018).

      14 14 Thrasher, S. (2018). There Is Much to Celebrate – and Much to Question – About Marvel's Black Panther . Esquire. (https://www.esquire.com/entertainment/movies/a18241993/black‐panther‐review‐politics‐killmonger (February 20, 2018).

      15 15 Thrasher.

      16 16 Thrasher.

      17 17 Thrasher.

      18 18 Hooks, B. (1995). Killing Rage: Ending Racism , 14. New York: Henry Holt and Company.).

      19 19 Fricker, M. (2007). Epistemic Injustice: Power and the Ethics of Knowing , 1. New York: Oxford University Press.

      20 20 Fricker, 4.

      21 21 Fricker, 155.

      Part III

      Metaphysics

      Introduction

      Metaphysics is the study of the nature of reality. While this often involves questions about the nature of the world, some of the most interesting contemporary questions about reality focus on our understanding of ourselves. We each believe that we have a mind, but what exactly is a mind, and how is it related to the brain? We each believe ourselves to be a person, but what exactly is a person and how can we be the same person over time? Do we really have free will? What about artificial intelligence? Could computers, one day soon, be conscious persons with the same rights as humans?

      Questioning the nature of reality immediately leads to questions about the universe itself. What is it made of? What is its nature? And how can we know? At its base, the matter of the universe is quantum mechanical in nature – but what does that mean? In Chapter 8, Dara Fogel uses examples from Star Trek to argue that we might live in a computer simulation. If we do, a whole host of questions arise. Are we free? Are other persons conscious? Are you real? These questions are explored by Fogel and others in this part.

      Metaphysical questions about persons often revolve around the mind. What exactly is it? Merely material? Something immaterial? Something in between? In Chapter 9, Dean Kowalski uses the adventures of the Marvel superhero Doctor Strange to give dualism – the belief in nonphysical souls interacting with physical bodies – serious consideration, and addresses some of its biggest problems. In Chapter 10, Matt Lawrence uses examples from The