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(2012) Philosophy & Technology 25 (3).
The idea of disembodied communication has received widespread discussion in the context of the various kinds of online interaction. Electronic mail is probably the purest form of text-based communication where interlocutors are present in mind rather than body. I argue that this online model provides a way of understanding and defending the possibility of a certain kind of public religious experience, contra the many critics of the very coherence of genuine religious experience. I introduce the concept of "telic possibility", a specific kind of modality, applying it to e-mail. I argue that we can reasonably move from the telic possibility of disembodied communication in mundane e-mail exchanges to the epistemic possibility of communication from a divine being in cases where the content of the messages is sufficiently extraordinary.
Publication details
DOI: 10.1007/s13347-011-0051-6
Full citation:
Oderberg, D. S. (2012). Disembodied communication and religious experience: the online model. Philosophy & Technology 25 (3), pp. 381-397.
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