Why this word is great
CYBERPHILOSOPHY — [Noun] The philosophical inquiry into the metaphysical, epistemological, and ontological implications of computer technologies, interrogating the nature of reality, self, and knowledge within digital realms. From the combining form cyber- (relating to computers, information technology, or virtual reality) + philosophy (love of wisdom, the study of fundamental nature of knowledge, reality, and existence). Unlike philosophy of technology, which surveys the broad horizon of human artifice from the wheel onward, or digital ethics, which prescribes moral codes for online conduct, cyberphilosophy plumbs the foundational shifts in being and knowing wrought by the digital substrate. It is the ontological weight of a persistent avatar after the user logs off, the epistemic vertigo of trusting a reality rendered in code, and the quiet horror of realizing your most intimate memories are stored in a format that will inevitably become obsolete—a discipline born from the quiet crisis of wondering if the wisdom we seek must now be compiled, not contemplated.