2. We are aiming…
…to explore how these
two stories are nodes for
provocative ideas on
morality, truth, and
authenticity.
3. We are aiming
To explore how these
two stories are nodes for
provocative ideas on
morality, truth, and
authenticity.
4. Questions from our Special Area
What is a crime, and who decides how serious a crime is?
What acts are considered crimes in some countries but
not in others?
Can a criminal be a hero?
Is anyone who breaks the law a criminal?
Should all countries follow the same legal code?
5. Questions from A History of
Cheating
What is cheating? How is it different from lying?
Is cheating ever justified?
What are the advantages and disadvantages cheating?
How should cheaters be punished?
Are we morally obligated to report any cheaters we encounter?
Under what circumstances is cheating a crime?
Is cheating simply about “breaking the rules”? Or is it about exploiting them?
Do certain institutions encourage cheating?
Are people born with a sense of fairness?
Should cheating disqualify a politician from winning elected office? How about
lying?
Lip Syncing, Autotune, and the Limits of the Authentic
6. Questions from Social Studies
What are the “best” and “worst” states you can think of? How are
you measuring them?
Are democracies better states than non-democracies?
How much of state failure can be attributed to politics?
If you were the leader of a failed or fragile state, whom would you
ask for help?
Are some states doomed to failure?
Is the traditional concept of the state outdated in an age of
globalization and the Internet?
7. Very basic plot outline
LttS – A housewife
murders her
husband with frozen
leg of lamb:
investigating officers
eat the evidence.
- Can a criminal be a
hero?
8. Very basic plot outline
Evidence – A
politician is
considered to be a
robot, but this is
never proven.
Should cheating
disqualify a
politician from
winning elected
office? How about
lying?
9. More Detailed Plot
Wife sits at home
Husband reveals he will divorce wife
Wife kills husband
Wife creates false alibi
Wife secretly laughs at inspectors
eating lamb
10. More Detailed Plot
Quinn and Lanning discuss whether Byerley is a
robot – never eats.
Robot morality is discussed.
Quinn attempts to get Byerley x-rayed: Byerley
lawyers him.
Byerley punches a man in the face on live TV
during a political rally to prove he is not a robot.
Byerley laughs at the possibility he is a robot.
11. More Detailed Plot
1) A robot may not injure a human being or,
through inaction, allow a human being to come to
harm.
2) A robot must obey the orders given it by human
beings except where such orders would conflict
with the First Law.
3) A robot must protect its own existence as long
as such protection does not conflict with the First
or Second Laws.
12. A diversion… A tool for analysing:
Formalism
Defamiliarisation.
Visual thesaurus:
interconnections of
language.
14. A tool for analysing: Formalism
Intended connotations and
possible connotations. Does
meaning exist independently of
our discovery of it?
Matrix Albino fight: ‘ghosts’ of
meaning – become tangible
upon belief or recognition.
Should all countries follow the
same legal code?
15. Intention and Meaning
Does intention matter
when we interpret a text?
Swearing in
Wolverhampton…
Death of the Author
Should a person be held
responsible for breaking
laws he or she doesn’t
know about?
20. Word-Level Analysis in LttS…
We are invited to sympathise
with a murderer. This is an
increasingly common genre in
popular fiction and film.
Where in this story do we
defamiliarise expected
connotations (especially as we
know the ending?).
Tired/told/knew
22. Word Level Analysis in Evidence
We are invited to consider
not only if L is a robot, but
also whether this matters.
23. Where in this story do we defamiliarise expected
connotations (especially as we know the ending?).
man./human 61 times: robot/robots 81 times.
24. Do we want to place ethics in the hands of a robot,
who can be blind to justice?
25. To Kill a Mockingbird – equality can only exist
before the eyes of the law, rather than other
things.
(World War Z)
26. Evidence and Being Authentic
In Evidence, we are
called upon to question
what it is to be
authentic.
Are we morally obligated
to report any cheaters
we encounter?
27. Evidence and Being Authentic
How important is
authenticity to us? How
important is being
original? Lampstand
idea...
28. Does Authenticity Matter in
Politicians?
https://youtu.be/XQPy88-E2zo?t=2m44s - it he a robot or not?
Whirling Top: if it stays spinning, his experience is a dream. If it falls,
he is in reality.
Does it fall or stay spinning in this video?
29. Does free-will really exist? Matter?
The zombie question.
Psychopathology in
CEOs.
Profit Morality.
30. Is it innately human to cheat?
http://thecreatorsprojec
t.vice.com/blog/prove-
youre-not-a-robot-with-
the-bot-or-not-poetry-
challenge
Robots in Japan; talk to a
robot ai. Googlebot.com
31. Is cheating part of surviving in the
real, flawed, fallen world?
Do we believe that truth
matters?
What is more important:
truth or effect?
What is cheating?
How is it different
from lying?
32. Both stories ending with ‘laugh’
‘chuckled’ – purposefully playful.
Light for hope and
release?
Or…
Light for joy and
irreverence?