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  1. At Odds? Sports, Gambling and Hyper-Commodification.Ned Lis-Clarke & Adrian Walsh - forthcoming - Sport, Ethics and Philosophy:1-19.
    Sports betting is a booming business. While gambling and elite sports have long been closely related—with examples dating back to the Roman Empire (Evans and Mcnamee 2021)—changes in technology and...
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  • Sport in an Algorithmic Age: Michel Serres on Bodily Metamorphosis.Aldo Houterman - forthcoming - Sport, Ethics and Philosophy:1-16.
    The algorithm has become an increasingly important concept in understanding human behavior in recent years. In the case of sport, human bodies are seen as superficial to the driving force of the algorithm, whether it be genetic, behavioral or surveillance-technological algorithms (Harari Citation2015, 2020; Zuboff Citation2019). However, the French mathematician and philosopher Michel Serres (1930–2019) structurally relate algorithms to sports and bodily experience at multiple places in his oeuvre. According to Serres, sport actually enables us to reprogram and rewrite our (...)
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  • The ethics of pigeon racing.Jan Deckers & Silvina Pezzetta - 2023 - Sport, Ethics and Philosophy 17 (4):465-476.
    There is a dearth of academic research on the ethics of pigeon racing. We argue that pigeon racing is associated with significant benefits and disadvantages, but that the benefits that have been associated with it can be provided by alternative practices. Disadvantages include the competitive element associated with racing, which creates a strong incentive to kill birds where this is not in their best interests, as well as the welfare issues related to transportation, the widowhood system, the races themselves, and (...)
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