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Battlestar Galactica and Philosophy: Knowledge Here Begins Out There

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Revision as of 07:53, 28 January 2008 by Tamaleaver (talk | contribs)
This article describes a book by Jason T. Eberl. For a general analysis of the series's philosophical aspects, see Philosophy in Battlestar Galactica. For the book from Open Court Publishing, see Battlestar Galactica and Philosophy (Open Court).
Battlestar Galactica and Philosophy: Knowledge Here Begins Out There
Battlestar Galactica and Philosophy: Knowledge Here Begins Out There
A book of the Blackwell Publishing line
Book No. 1
Author(s) Jason T. Eberl
Adaptation of
No. of Pages 224
Published January 29, 2008
ISBN 1405178140
Chronology
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Battlestar Galactica and Philosophy: Knowledge Here Begins Out There (Blackwell Publishing, December 2007, ISBN 1405178140), edited by philosophy professor Jason T. Eberl, is a collection of several essays dealing with philosophical aspects of Battlestar Galactica, and an entry in Blackwell's Philosophy and Pop Culture Series.

According to the original call for abstracts, the essays are to be "philosophically substantial but accessible, written to engage the intelligent lay reader".[1]

Contents

Erik D. Baldwin How to be Happy after the End of the World

Robert Sharp When Machines Get Souls: Nietzsche on the Cylon Uprising

J. Robert Loftis “What a Strange Little Man”: Baltar the Tyrant?

Jason P. Blahuta The Politics of Crisis: Machiavelli in the Colonial Fleet

Robert Arp “And They Have a Plan”: Cylons as Persons Tracie Mahaffey

Amy Kind “I’m Sharon, but I’m a Different Sharon”: The Identity of Cylons

Jerold J. Abrams Embracing the “Children of Humanity”: How to Prevent the Next Cylon War

Brian Willems When the Non-Human Knows Its Own Death

Randall M. Jensen The Search for Starbuck: The Needs of the Many vs. the Few

Andrew Terjesen Resistance vs. Collaboration on New Caprica: What Would You Do?

George A. Dunn Being Boomer: Identity, Alienation, and Evil

David Roden Cylons in the Original Position: Limits of Posthuman Justice

Jason T. Eberl “I Am an Instrument of God”: Religious Belief, Atheism, and Meaning Jennifer A. Vines

Taneli Kukkonen God against the Gods: Faith and the Exodus of the Twelve Colonies

David Kyle Johnson “A Story That Is Told Again, and Again, and Again”: Recurrence, Providence, and Freedom

Eric J. Silverman Adama’s True Lie: Earth and the Problem of Knowledge

James McRae Zen and the Art of Cylon Maintenance

Elizabeth F. Cooke “Let It Be Earth”: The Pragmatic Virtue of Hope

Sarah Conly Is Starbuck a Woman?

David Koepsell Gaius Baltar and the Transhuman Temptation[2]

See also

References

  1. Call for Abstracts (backup available on Archive.org) .
  2. PhilosopherJedi (November 2007). Cylons in America (backup available on Archive.org) (in ). Retrieved on 28 January 2007.