The Orville, Orwell, and the “Black Mirror”
Lecture no. 14 from the course: Sci-Phi: Science Fiction as Philosophy
Taught by Professor David K. Johnson | 34 min
The pervasive influence of social media makes life feel more performative than ever, yet it really just demonstrates an old dilemma heightened by new technology. Here, see how the anthology show Black Mirror and the Star Trek-influenced series The Orville offer episodes that examine extreme cases of objectification and mob mentality. Also, look back on a pre-internet example in George Orwell’s much-adapted Nineteen Eighty-Four.
24 Lectures
1
Inception and the Interpretation of Art
0
of 34 min
2
The Matrix and the Value of Knowledge
0
of 33 min
3
The Matrix Sequels and Human Free Will
0
of 34 min
4
The Adjustment Bureau, the Force, and Fate
0
of 32 min
5
Contact: Science versus Religion
0
of 34 min
6
Arrival: Aliens and Radical Translation
0
of 34 min
7
Interstellar: Is Time Travel Possible?
0
of 34 min
8
Doctor Who and Time Travel Paradoxes
0
of 35 min
9
Star Trek: TNG and Alternate Worlds
0
of 33 min
10
Dark City, Dollhouse, and Personal Identity
0
of 36 min
11
Westworld and A.I. Artificial Intelligence
0
of 36 min
12
Transcendence and the Dangers of AI
0
of 35 min
13
The Thirteenth Floor: Are We Simulated?
0
of 33 min
14
The Orville, Orwell, and the “Black Mirror”
0
of 34 min
15
Star Wars: Good versus Evil
0
of 33 min
16
Firefly, Blake’s 7, and Political Rebellion
0
of 34 min
17
Starship Troopers, Doctor Who, and Just War
0
of 35 min
18
The Prime Directive and Postcolonialism
0
of 33 min
19
Capitalism in Metropolis, Elysium, and Panem
0
of 34 min
20
Snowpiercer and Climate Change
0
of 36 min
21
Soylent Green: Overpopulation and Euthanasia
0
of 34 min
22
Gattaca and the Ethics of Reproduction
0
of 32 min
23
The Handmaid’s Tale: Feminism and Religion
0
of 36 min
24
Kubrick’s 2001 and Nietzsche’s Ubermensch
0
of 38 min