In this Book

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Has any film director had a greater impact on popular culture than Steven Spielberg? Whether filming Holocaust heroes and villains, soldiers, dinosaurs, extraterrestrials, or explorers in search of the Holy Grail, Spielberg has given filmgoers some of the most memorable characters and wrenching moments in the history of cinema. Whatever his subject—war, cloning, slavery, terrorism, or adventure—all of Spielberg's films have one aspect in common: a unique view of the moral fabric of humanity. Dean A. Kowalski's Steven Spielberg and Philosophy is like a remarkable conversation after a night at the movie theater, offering new insights and unexpected observations about the director's most admired films. Some of the nation's most respected philosophers investigate Spielberg's art, asking fundamental questions about the nature of humanity, cinema, and Spielberg's expression of his chosen themes. Applying various philosophical principles to the movies, the book explores such topics as the moral demands of parenthood in War of the Worlds; the ultimate unknowability of the "other" in Close Encounters of the Third Kind and Schindler's List; the relationship between nature and morality in Jurassic Park; the notion of consciousness in A.I.: Artificial Intelligence; issues of war theory and ethics in Munich; and the foundation of human rights in Amistad. Impressive in scope, this volume illustrates the philosophical tenets of a wide variety of thinkers from Plato to Aquinas, Locke, and Levinas. Contributors introduce readers to philosophy while simultaneously providing deeper insight into Spielberg's approach to filmmaking. The essays consider Spielberg's movies using key philosophical cornerstones: metaphysics, epistemology, ethics, axiology, aesthetics, and political philosophy, among others. At the same time, Steven Spielberg and Philosophy is accessible to those new to philosophy, using the philosophical platform to ponder larger issues embedded in film and asking fundamental questions about the nature of cinema and how meanings are negotiated. The authors contend that movies do not present philosophy—rather philosophy is something viewers do while watching and thinking about films. Using Spielberg's films as a platform for discussing these concepts, the authors contemplate questions that genuinely surprise the reader, offering penetrating insights that will be welcomed by film critics, philosophers, and fans alike.

Table of Contents

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  1. Cover
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  1. Title Page, Copyright Page
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  1. Contents
  2. pp. v-vi
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  1. Acknowledgments
  2. p. vii
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  1. Introduction
  2. pp. 1-4
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  1. Part I: Philosophy, the Filmmaker, and the Human Condition
  1. The "Big-Little" Film and Philosophy: Two Takes on Spielbergian Innocence
  2. pp. 7-37
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  1. The Recovery of Childhood and the Search for the Absent Father
  2. pp. 38-49
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  1. Levinasian Ethics of Alterity: The Face of the Other in Spielberg's Cinematic Language
  2. pp. 50-68
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  1. The Paradox of Fictional Belief and Its Moral Implications in Jaws
  2. pp. 69-81
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  1. A .I.: Artificial Intelligence and the Tragic Sense of Life
  2. pp. 82-94
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  1. Part II: Values, Virtue, and Justice
  1. What Is Wrong with Cloning a Dinosaur? Jurassic Park and Nature as a Source of Moral Authority
  2. pp. 97-111
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  1. Is Oskar Schindler a Good Man?
  2. pp. 112-128
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  1. A Spielbergian Ethics of the Family in Saving Private Ryan and The Color Purple
  2. pp. 129-149
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  1. Human Rights, Human Nature, and Amistad
  2. pp. 150-169
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  1. Terrorism, Counterterrorism, and "The Story of What Happens Next" in Munich
  2. pp. 170-188
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  1. Part III: Realism, Mind, and Metaphysics
  1. Spielberg and Cinematic Realism
  2. pp. 191-209
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  1. A.I.: Artificial Intelligence: Artistic Indulgence or Advanced Inquiry?
  2. pp. 210-226
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  1. Minority Report, Molinism, and the Viability of Precrime
  2. pp. 227-247
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  1. Appendix: Discussing Five Spielberg Films
  2. pp. 248-266
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  1. Contributors
  2. pp. 267-270
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  1. Index
  2. pp. 271-274
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