Unit convenor and teaching staff |
Unit convenor and teaching staff
Lecturer
Mark Alfano
Lecturer
Paul Formosa
Jennifer Duke-Yonge
Oisin Deery
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Credit points |
Credit points
10
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Prerequisites |
Prerequisites
40cp at 1000 level or above
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Corequisites |
Corequisites
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Co-badged status |
Co-badged status
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Unit description |
Unit description
We live an increasing part of our lives online, playing videogames, and engaging with various technologies and virtual realities. Our workplaces are more automated, cars drive themselves, and robots take care of us. Is this a good thing? What is it doing to us? Where will it take us in the future? In this unit we draw on philosophical and ethical theories to explore the impacts of information and related technologies on humanity. Topics we will explore include issues around human-technology relations, such as: technological neutrality and technological determinism; embodiment, gender, and technology; and the co-evolution of mind and technology. We will examine ethical aspects of technology, such as: the impacts that online sharing has on our philosophical understandings of friendship; the right to internet privacy; how theories in moral psychology explain the ethical impacts of playing videogames; the ethics of self-driving cars and robotic care-workers; and the justice implications of the automatisation of work. Finally, we also look at topics surrounding the intertwining of humanity and technology and the future impacts of Artificial Intelligence (AI), such as: whether AI and the singularity is an existential risk to humanity; how technology will be used as a tool of human enhancement; and whether we will (and should) become cyborgs and stop being human. |
Information about important academic dates including deadlines for withdrawing from units are available at https://www.mq.edu.au/study/calendar-of-dates
On successful completion of this unit, you will be able to:
Unless a Special Consideration request has been submitted and approved, a 5% penalty (of the total possible mark) will be applied each day a written assessment is not submitted, up until the 7th day (including weekends). After the 7th day, a mark of ‘0’ (zero) will be awarded even if the assessment is submitted. Submission time for all written assessments is set at 11.55pm. A 1-hour grace period is provided to students who experience a technical issue. This late penalty will apply to written reports and recordings only. Latesubmission of time sensitive tasks (such as tests/exams, performance assessments/presentations, scheduled practical assessments/labs will be addressed by the unit convenor in a Special consideration application.
Name | Weighting | Hurdle | Due |
---|---|---|---|
Media presentation | 35% | No | Sunday 28/04/2024 @ 11:55p.m. |
Participation | 20% | No | Weeks 2 – 12 |
Research essay | 45% | No | Sunday 2/6/2024 @ 11:55p.m. |
Assessment Type 1: Media presentation
Indicative Time on Task 2: 25 hours
Due: Sunday 28/04/2024 @ 11:55p.m.
Weighting: 35%
Media presentation on a topic from the unit.
Assessment Type 1: Participatory task
Indicative Time on Task 2: 15 hours
Due: Weeks 2 – 12
Weighting: 20%
Participation in discussion and related activities
Assessment Type 1: Essay
Indicative Time on Task 2: 35 hours
Due: Sunday 2/6/2024 @ 11:55p.m.
Weighting: 45%
Research essay exploring one relevant topic in depth
1 If you need help with your assignment, please contact:
2 Indicative time-on-task is an estimate of the time required for completion of the assessment task and is subject to individual variation
Resources:
Delivery:
W1 – Introduction: Philosophy and Technology (OD) - February 22
W2 – What is technology? Optimist and pessimist views of technology (OD) – February 29
W3 - Co-evolution of mind and technology (MA) – March 7
W4 - Cognition and technology (MA) – March 14
W5 –Artificial Intelligence and Philosophy (MA) – March 21
W6 – The Singularity and Mind-uploading: Will humanity survive? (OD) – March 28
W7 – Artificial moral agents: Can robots be persons? (OD) – April 4
W8 – Autonomous Vehicles and Carebots: How to live with machines (OD) – April 11
MID-SEMESTER BREAK
W9 –Videogames and morality: Do virtual actions matter? (PF) – May 2
W10 – Platform and Surveillance capitalism (OD) – May 9
W11 – Privacy on the Internet: Do we have any and should we care? (OD) – May 16
W12 – AI, Automation and Work (PF) – May 23
W13 – No New Content – May 30
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Unit information based on version 2024.03 of the Handbook