Description
Temporarily out of stock
Title: Better Call Saul & Philosophy
Author: HETER JOSHUA/ COPPENGER COPPENGER (EDS)
Format: PAPERBACK
Publication date: 01/10/2022
Imprint: OPEN UNIVERSE
Price: $40.00
Publishing status: Active
Better Call Saul and Philosophy: I Think Therefore I Scamis a collection of twenty-three essays exploring the philosophical themes in the hit television show Better Call Saul, a prequel to the TV show Breaking Bad. The sixth and final season of Better Call Saul, with thirteen episodes, began airing in April 2022.
The central character is Jimmy McGill, whom we know from Breaking Bad as Saul Goodman. In Better Call Saul he first takes the name of Saul Goodman from the phrase \”S’all Good, Man!\” Jimmy/Saul is a natural con artist who not only scams from self-interest but also because he enjoys it. He has a strange relationship with his brother, the distinguished lawyer Charles McGill, who resents Jimmy’s delinquency and advantage in parental affection. Jimmy/Saul becomes a lawyer for a drug cartel, and most of the people he meets are criminals and other kinds of villains.
Like Breaking Bad, Better Call Saul raises a wide range of philosophical issues including the nature of good and evil, personal identity, free will and determinism, the law as it relates to morality, the ethical implications of the war on drugs, death and dying, and many more. Better Call Saul and Philosophy offers thoughtful fans of the show deeper and more provocative insights into the story and the characters.
Topics covered include: the morality of keeping promises to wrongdoers, the nature of psychosomatic illness, difficult moral choices facing lawyers, just how good or bad are some of the compromised characters in the show, the unintended consequences of the War on Drugs, the similarities between drug cartels and governments, whether bad people are just unlucky, the perils of self-deception, and whether we ever really have much of a choice.
Better Call Saul and Philosophy is Volume 8 in the path-breaking series, Pop Culture and Philosophy.
Review:
https://www.cheatsheet.com/entertainment/3-books-read-better-call-saul-finale.html
\”This is a great read and I swear I’m not just saying that because I’m on the show! Like the other books in this series, Better Call Saul and Philosophy carries on the tradition of examining the complexity of character or, in this case, characters. What motivates them? What inspires them? But, most importantly, what inspires and motivates us to like them? This is a terrific read for those who have any interest in seemingly decent people doing terribly unseemly things. You know, like a vet who loves animals but is okay with people being murdered.\”
-Joe DeRosa, a.k.a. Dr. Caldera, the animal-loving vet
\”The landscape of Better Call Saul, where each character is cultivated with great subtlety and humanity, is fertile ground for focused examination. This collection is an insightful-and often surprising-look at the show’s big players, how they preen and strive, grow and fail.\”
-Peter Diseth, a.k.a. DDA Bill Oakley
\”Do the characters in Better Call Saul have a moral compass? Do they give a damn about ethics-and if so, in what capacity? A number of knowledgeable contributors discuss these and many more topics in twenty-three (occasionally humorous) chapters. So, before calling Saul, you Better Read this Book!\”
-Dr. Marius Stan, a.k.a. Bogdan, the car wash owner in Breaking Bad
\”Utilitarian decisions, musings about mortality, questions as to whether one is the same person over time, dealing with the consequences of self-deception-there’s so much philosophical content in Better Call Saul, all of which profoundly enriches the story. This entertaining and thought-provoking volume will more than help the reader appreciate that enrichment.\”
-Robert Arp PhD, co-editor of Breaking Bad and Philosophy: Badder Living through Chemistry (2012)
Contents:
Contents
It’s Showtime, Folks! 000
I Slippin’ Jimmy with a law degree is like a chimp with a machine gun 000
1. Scamming for Fun
Patrick Clipsham 000
2. Don’t Go to Lawyers for Moral Guidance
Shane J. Ralston 000
3. Can It Be Right to Defend the Guilty?
Daniel Cook 000
4. Better Call the DEA?
Amy E. White 000
II You can be on one side of the law or the other 000
5. The Sovereign State of Salamanca
Walter Barta and Thomas Paul Barnes, Esq. 000
6. The Morality of Mike’s Manifesto
Jakob R. Gibson and Tobias T. Gibson 000
7. Saul Goodman Stands before the Law
E.F. Haven 000
III Put on your big boy pants and face reality 000
8. Self-Hatred as Identity
Conall Cash 000
9. The Prequel versus Free Will
Landon Frim 000
10. Slippin’ Identity
Kristina Sekrst 000
11. The Self-Deception Road
Darci Doll 000
IV Confidence is good-facts on your side, better 000
12. A Cave of His Own Making
Timothy J. Golden 000
13. Chuckrates v. The Saulphists
Walter Barta and Thomas Paul Barnes, Esq. 000
14. Salvaging Sunk Costs
Joshua Heter 000
15. Saul’s Bullshit’s Not All Good, Man
Joshua Luczak 000
16. Better Call Saul Because Chuck’s Condition Is Real
Amber E. George 000
V See, that’s your problem-thinking the ends justify the means 000
17. Is Morality for Suckers?
Abe Witonsky 000
18. Dissenting Opinions
Callie K. Phillips 000
19. Can We Blame Jimmy for Being Jimmy?
Daniel Carr 000
20. Why Is Breaking Skateboarder’s Legs Wrong?
J. Spencer Atkins 000
VI Never make the same mistake twice 000
21. Finding the Good in Nacho
James Rocha 000
22. Breaking Bad Promises
F.E. Guerra-Pujol 000
23. Why Does Jimmy Get to Determine Chuck’s Healthcare?
James Clark Ross 000
Bibliography 000
The Hostile Witnesses 000
Index 000
Author Biography:
Joshua Heter is an Assistant Professor of Philosophy at Jefferson College in Hillsboro, Missouri. He co-edited Westworld and Philosophy: Mind Equals Blown (2019) and The Man in the High Castle and Philosophy: Subversive Reports from Another Reality (2017).
Series: Pop Culture and Philosophy
ISBN: 9781637700266
Dimension: 228mm X 152mm
Edition: 01