Abstract is missing.
- Android PhilosophyHiroshi Ishiguro. 3 [doi]
- Robots, Empowerment, and EquityIllah R. Nourbakhsh. 5 [doi]
- The Automation of the Social? What Robots Teach Us About Sociality and ResponsibilityMark Coeckelbergh. 7-8 [doi]
- Social Robots As Companions: Challenges and OpportunitiesKerstin Dautenhahn. 9-10 [doi]
- Smart, Autonomous, and Social: Robots As Challenge to Human ExceptionalismLuciano Floridi. 11 [doi]
- The Other Question: The Issue of Robot RightsDavid J. Gunkel. 13-14 [doi]
- Social and Moral Relationships with RobotsPeter H. Kahn. 15-16 [doi]
- Machine Morality OperationalizedJohn P. Sullins. 17 [doi]
- Moral Machines and Human EthicsWendell Arnhold Wallach. 19-20 [doi]
- Key Elements for Human-Robot Joint ActionAurélie Clodic, Rachid Alami, Raja Chatila. 23-33 [doi]
- Affordances and Affordance Space: A Conceptual Framework for Application in Social RoboticsFelix Lindner 0001, Carola Eschenbach. 35-45 [doi]
- Robots are not Embodied! Conceptions of Embodiment and their Implications for Social Human-Robot InteractionTom Ziemke, Serge Thill. 49-53 [doi]
- Perceptible Agency, Shared Affordances and Robot InteractionsMaria Brincker. 55-61 [doi]
- Social Meta-Learning: Learning How to Make Use of Others as a Resource for LearningJedediah W. P. Allen. 63-69 [doi]
- Shaping Robotic MindsVíctor Fernández Castro. 71-78 [doi]
- Robot Sociality: Genuine or Simulation?Mark H. Bickhard. 81-85 [doi]
- Sociality Without Prior IndividualityAlex Levine. 87-96 [doi]
- Varieties of the 'As If': Five Ways to Simulate an ActionJohanna Seibt. 97-104 [doi]
- Social Robots and Social InteractionRaul Hakli. 105-114 [doi]
- Artificial Agents: Some Consequences of a Few CapacitiesMigle Laukyte. 115-122 [doi]
- (How) Can Robots Make Commitments? A Pragmatic ApproachJohn Michael, Alessandro Salice. 125-133 [doi]
- Sociable Robots: From Reliability to Cooperative-MindednessHans Bernhard Schmid. 135-136 [doi]
- Can Robots Understand Normative Constraints?Frank Esken. 137-141 [doi]
- Ontology and Normativity in the Care-Robot RelationshipAntonio Carnevale. 143-150 [doi]
- Communication-Theoretical Issues in Social RoboticsCharles Ess, Satomi Sugiyama, Eleanor Sandry, Michaela Pfadenhauer. 153-156 [doi]
- "Robots Cannot Lie": Performative Parasites of Robot-Human TheatreGunhild Borggreen. 157-163 [doi]
- A Philosophical Look at the Uncanny ValleyAdriano Angelucci, Manuel Bastioni, Pierluigi Graziani, Maria Grazia Rossi. 165-169 [doi]
- Making Sense of Empathy with Social RobotsJosh Redstone. 171-177 [doi]
- Conditions of Empathy in Human-Robot InteractionRyuji Yamazaki. 179-186 [doi]
- Moral Competence in Robots?Bertram F. Malle. 189-198 [doi]
- Social Robots as Mirrors of (Failed) CommunionNiklas Toivakainen. 199-207 [doi]
- Introduction to Moral Induction Model and its Deployment in Artificial AgentsDaniel Devatman Hromada, Ilaria Gaudiello. 209-216 [doi]
- Artificial Moral Agents: Creative, Autonomous, Social. An Approach Based on Evolutionary ComputationIoan Muntean, Don A. Howard. 217-230 [doi]
- Trust and ArtifactsFabio Dalla Libera, Masashi Kasaki, Yuichiro Yoshikawa, Tora Koyama. 231-240 [doi]
- Social Robots and SentimentalityRaffaele Rodogno. 241-244 [doi]
- Brains on Wheels: Theoretical and Ethical Issues in Bio-RoboticsMartin Mose Bentzen. 245-251 [doi]
- Dombots: An Ethical and Technical Challenge to the Robotics of IntimacyJohn Carter McKnight. 253-261 [doi]
- Responsibility, Robots, and Humans: A Preliminary Reflection on the Phenomenology of Self-Driving CarsMark Coeckelbergh. 265-269 [doi]
- Robots and Responsibility: A Reply to Mark CoeckelberghMichael Funk. 271-275 [doi]
- Ethical Issues Concerning Lethal Autonomous Robots in WarfareAnne Gerdes. 277-289 [doi]
- Another Case against Killer RobotsMinao Kukita. 291-295 [doi]
- Autonomous Killer Robots Are Probably Good NewsVincent C. Müller, Thomas W. Simpson. 297-305 [doi]
- Gendered by Design: Gender Codes in Social RoboticsGlenda Shaw-Garlock. 309-317 [doi]
- Human-Robot Interaction and Human Self-Realization: Reflections on the Epistemology of DiscriminationMarco Nørskov. 319-327 [doi]
- The Social Robot as 'Charismatic Leader': A Phenomenology of Human Submission to Nonhuman PowerMatthew E. Gladden. 329-339 [doi]
- 'Dynamic' Categorization and Rationalized Ascription: A Study on NAOGlenda Hannibal. 343-347 [doi]
- Investigating Human-Robot Interaction through an Interactive Art InstallationMorten Nielsen, Vibeke H. Nielsen, Rie Rasmussen, Trine Skjødt Axelgaard, Agata Klusak. 349-361 [doi]