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When you have been wandering the cosmos from one end of eternity to another for nearly a thousand years, what's your philosophy of life, the universe, and everything? Doctor Who is 50 years' old in 2013. Through its long life on television and beyond it has inspired much debate due to the richness and complexity of the metaphysical and moral issues that it poses. This is the first in-depth philosophical investigation of Doctor Who in popular culture. From 1963's An Unearthly Child through the latest series, it considers continuity and change in the pictures that the programme paints of the nature of truth and knowledge, science and religion, space and time, good and evil, including the uncanny, the problem of evil, the Doctor's complex ethical motivations, questions of persisting personal identity in the Time Lord processes of regeneration, the nature of time travel through 'wibbley-wobbley, timey-wimey stuff, how quantum theory affects our understanding of time; and the nature of the mysterious and irrational in the Doctor's universe.
Kevin S. Decker is Associate Professor of Philosophy and Director of the Philosophy Programme at Eastern Washington University. He has co-edited books on the philosophical significance of Star Wars, Star Trek and the Terminator films and television show.
PrefaceIntroduction: Geronimo! 1. Lost in Time The Uncanny Experience of Wandering in the Fourth Dimension2. Exterminate! Evil Must Be Fought3. We All Depend on the Beast BelowThe Monstrous Other4. The Ethics of the Last of the Time LordsA Cosmic Prometheus5. Not the Man He WasRegenerating the Doctor6. Speaking Treason FluentlyCan You Hear the Sound of Empires Toppling?7. Did I Mention It Also Travels in Time?Rewriting History, Line by LineBibliography Index