Foreword 1 Bernard REBER Introductions 5 Before the first evening 5 I.1 First evening - First story 14 I.2 Second evening - Second story 15 I.3 Third evening - Ultimate story 18 I.4. Beginning of the awakening - Histories found ( Return to the roots ) 27 I.5 The two sources (seeds, seedlings, schemes) 30 I.6 Far and wide open book 37 Inter-section 1 What is Ethics of Sciences, Technologies, and Innovation? 49 Book I Living Your Values 59 Before the first morning 59 1.
1 The measure of all things 62 1.1.1 At any time 62 1.1.2 A world of difference 63 1.2 Having read this book 64 1.3 At the roots of ethics 65 1.3.
1 What is the just? 67 1.3.2 What is the good? 68 1.3.3 Duty to respect 70 1.3.4 Chanson de geste 72 1.3.
5 Closed book, in the open 77 1.3.6 To be present 78 1.4 At the roots of violence ( Sins of the Fathers ) ( Must one eat up? ) ( Winter is coming ) 78 1.4.1 Addendum: An eye for an eye 83 1.4.2 Change in our time 84 1.
5 Is life a game? 85 1.5.1 The game of the world 85 1.5.2 Between game and world: three movements 87 1.5.3 From the three movements to the fourth premise: from lusory attitude to morality design 88 1.6 The ethics paradox 92 Inter-section 2 Cis-theme 99 Book II European Constructions of the Future 143 The rapture of Europe 143 2.
1 What Europe do we want to live in together? 145 2.1.1 Futures (and Europe) ( imagined communities ) 146 2.1.2 (Fore)seeing like a State 146 2.1.3 The European project 147 2.1.
4 Futures (and science and technology) 148 2.1.5 Palimpsest and palinode ( imagined communities ) 149 2.2 Precious participation 150 2.2.1 The three deficits 150 2.2.1.
1 Time travels 152 2.2.1.2 The burnout of the hummingbird (deficit, overflow, responsibility and catastrophe) ( a cautionary tail ) 154 2.2.1.3 Against the sovereign scheme and its world 155 2.2.
2 Challenges in Transition 158 2.2.2.1 Project Transition 158 2.2.2.2 The two issues of our age: Democracy for Climate? 159 2.2.
2.3 To Chantal ( États généraux ) 160 2.2.2.4 Thinking in Transition 163 2.2.2.5 Transitions in the time of pandemic 166 2.
2.2.6 L''autre fin de l''histoire 169 2.2.2.7 The Democracy Mystique 170 2.2.2.
8 Participatory inclusive deliberative democracy 173 2.3 Science and politics: divides and alternatives (making sense together) 176 2.3.1 Introducing the courage of alternatives 176 2.3.2 Openness to the worlds: towards alternatives 179 2.3.2.
1 The cosmopolitical question 179 2.3.2.2 Political and cosmopolitical epistemologies 180 2.3.2.3 Precautionary principle and regime change 182 Inter-section 3 The Other Europes 185 Book III Institutions and Innovations of Value 191 Europe of values 191 3.1 Institutionalizing ethics: the value of ethicization 195 3.
2 "Ethics of" 199 3.2.1 Addendum: the other ethicization 201 3.3 Europocene 202 3.3.1 The Anthropocene Misunderstanding: what''s in a name and how to make the most of it 202 3.3.2 The Question of Europe 204 Inter-section 4 For Love 207 Book IV We Have Never Been Human 211 Preliminaries: Ethics, Transitions, and something out of sight 211 4.
1 Human dignity, I write your name (touchstone) 215 4.1.1 The section in brief 215 4.1.2 The inquiry is underway 215 4.1.3 Human dignity and how did we get here? 220 4.1.
4 Conclusions 225 4.2. Portrait-robot (breaking through the artificialities of intelligence and of free will) 227 4.3 Human too human ( Ecce homo ) (us) (last dialogue of Estella and Sophy) 229 4.3.1 Epilogue 230 4.4 Scriptures (changing life) (the code) (the typewriter and the book of life) 232 4.4.
1 The ethical framework 235 4.4.2 Political epistemologies 235 4.4.3 Ethics Governance 236 4.4.4 The other code. Towards the world - Hacking, Designing, Making 238 4.
5 Letter to Apolline (transhumanism) 242 4.6 The end 247 Bibliography 253 Table of Epigraphs 267 Index 271.