Read more
This volume highlights interdisciplinary research on the ethical, metaphysical, and experimental dimensions of extended reality technologies. It explores themes connected to the nature of virtual objects, the value of virtual experiences and relationships, experimental ethics, moral psychology in the metaverse, and game/simulation design.
List of contents
Introducing
Exploring extended realities: Metaphysical, psychological, and ethical challenges Andrew Kissel and Erick José Ramirez Part 1: What is extended reality? 1. "Back to Reality": The case against Ludo-Fictionalism
Espen Aarseth 2. Fictionalism and virtual objects
Mark Silcox 3. Against metaphysical interpretations of VR
Grant Tavinor 4. The intersecting frontiers of extended reality and neuropsychology
Thomas D. Parsons and Joseph Neisser Part 2: Is there an ethics for extended reality? 5. Mediated reality
Michael Madary 6. Extended reality, control, and problems of the self: An ethical analysis
Erick José Ramirez, Shelby Jennett, Dorian Clay, and Mohit Gandhi 7. Moral narratives in virtual worlds
Andrew Kissel Part 3: What can we do with extended realities? 8. Virtual reality in experimental moral psychology: Identifying and understanding judgment-action discrepancy
Kathryn. B. Francis 9. Moral behavior in virtual reality
Eugy Han and Jeremy N. Bailenson 10. Doing good with virtual reality: The ethics of using virtual simulations for improving human morality
Jon Rueda 11. Through a glass virtually: On the future of extended realities
Erick José Ramirez and Andrew Kissel
About the author
Andrew Kissel is Assistant Professor of Philosophy and Religious Studies at Old Dominion University. His research focuses on the foundations of moral responsibility in virtual and non-virtual contexts. With the Virginia Modelling, Analysis, and Simulation Center (VMASC), he develops thought experiments in VR, including work funded by the National Endowment for the Humanities.
Erick José Ramirez is Associate Professor of Philosophy at Santa Clara University. He has developed numerous thought experiments for virtual reality, which are available on his personal website: https://www.erickjramirez.com. He is the author of
The Ethics of Virtual and Augmented Reality: Building Worlds (Routledge).