How Computers Are Changing Philosophy
Terry Bynum, Southern Connecticut State University
Jim Moor, Dartmouth College
Chair: Robert Cavalier, Carnegie Mellon University
Thinking and Computing: Computers as Special Kinds of Signs
Jim Fetzer
University of Minnesota
Introduced by Martin Fricke
Explaining the Phi Phenomenon without Dennett's Exotica:
All You Need is Good Ol' Computation
Selmer Bringsjord & Ron Noel, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute
A Universal Translation Algorithm for Context-Free Phrase Structure Languages
Joseph F. Hanna, Michigan State University
Mind-Models As Research Tools in Philosophy
John A. Barker, Southern Illinois University at Edwardsville
The PT-Project: An Internet-based Student-Faculty Research Project in Cognitive Science
David Anderson, Harry McBurney, Brent Juelich, John Nugent, Greg Flint, Matt Carlson, & Chris Ahillen, Illinois State University
Pornography and the Internet
Doug Birsch, Villanova
Feminists and Pornography in Cyberspace
Susan Mallon Ross, Clarkson University
Wizards, Toads, and Ethics
Wes Cooper
Chair: Charles Ess, Drury College
Electronic Socratics: Philosophical Multimedia in the Academy and for the General Public
Ken Knisely
Great Voyages: The History of Western Philosophy from 1492-1776
William Uzgalis
What is Socrates or The World Archive of Philosophy?
Ernst-Jan C. Wit
Anthropological Concepts in AI
Anne Foerst, MIT
Human Knowledge
Vladimir Geroimenko, Goteborg University, Sweden
The Very Idea of Computer Self- Knowledge and Self-Deception
Sanford C. Goldberg, Grinnell College
John Dewey Meets the Barney Generation: The Role of Computational Media in Coming to Know
Elliot Soloway*
University of Michigan
Introduced by Nelson Pole, Cleveland State University
*Due to a medical emergency, Elliot Soloway will not be able to attend.
Scott Stevens, Carnegie Mellon Informedia, will give a substitute presentation.
The Transversal Logic of the World Wide Web: A Philosophical Analysis
Mike Sandbothe, University of Magdeburg, Germany
Hyperproof and Visual Reasoning
Gerard Allwein & Atsushi Shimojima, Visual Inference Laboratory, Indiana University
Panel Discussion on Computers and the Future of Higher Education
Marvin Croy, University of North Carolina/Charlotte
Helen Nissenbaum, Princeton University
Richard Scheines, Carnegie Mellon University
Chair: Terry Bynum
Civil Cyber-discourse Can Virtual Virtues Be Taught?
Jon Dorbolo, Oregon State University
Teaching Ethics Using the Web
Larry Hinman, San Diego
Randomized Algorithms
Don Fallis
Chair: Catherine Womack, Union College
Software for Comprehensive Logic Instruction
Nicholas Asher, Rob Koons, David V. Newman
Artificial Morality: Extolling the Virtues of Capitalism
John F. Decker and Greg Scaffidi
Computing Beauty-values and Philosophy of Art
Vladimir Lobovikov, Visiting Professor, University of Texas
Computer Ethics and the New Social Ethos
James M. Willson-Quayle