Privacy 1st Edition – PDF/EPUB Version Downloadable
$49.99
Author(s): Steven M. Cahn, Carissa Veliz
Publisher: Wiley-Blackwell
ISBN: 9781119932550
Edition: 1st Edition
An incisive compendium of philosophical literature on privacy, part of the acclaimed Wiley-Blackwell Readings in Philosophy series
Companies collect and share much of your daily life, from your location and search history, to your likes, habits, and relationships. As more and more of our personal data is collected, analyzed, and distributed, we need to think carefully about what we might be losing when we give up our privacy.
Privacy is a thought-provoking collection of philosophical essays on privacy, offering deep insights into the nature of privacy, its value, and the consequences of its loss. Bringing together both classic and contemporary work, this timely volume explores the theories, issues, debates, and applications of the philosophical study of privacy. The essays address concealment and exposure, the liberal value of privacy, privacy in social media, privacy rights and public information, privacy and the limits of law, and more.
- Highlights the work of emerging thinkers and leaders in the subject
- Presents work from philosophers such as Judith Jarvis Thomson, Ruth Gavison, Thomas Scanlon, W. A. Parent, and Thomas Nagel
- Explores privacy in contexts including governance, law, ethics, political philosophy, and public policy
- Discusses data collection, online tracking, digital surveillance, and other contemporary privacy issues
Edited by award-winning privacy specialist Carissa Veliz and renowned philosopher and author Steven Cahn, Privacy is a must-read anthology for philosophers, psychologists, sociologists, and advanced undergraduate and graduate students taking courses on digital and applied ethics, philosophy, media studies, communications, computer science, engineering, and sociology.
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Privacy 1st Edition – PDF/EPUB Version Downloadable
$49.99
Author(s): Eric Barendt
Publisher: Routledge
ISBN: 9780754620716
Edition: 1st Edition
Privacy is a complex and controversial right. The essays in this book address fundamental issues about its value and how best it may be defined. Some of them examine its importance and scope in the context of the information society in which both government and business acquire ever more knowledge about the conduct and attitudes of individuals. Others address the use of privacy to protect the rights of women and to protect individuals against the media.

