What Do We Owe to Novel Synthetic Beings and How Can We Be Sure?

被引:2
|
作者
McKeown, Alex [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Oxford, Warneford Hosp, Wellcome Ctr Eth & Humanities, Dept Psychiat, Oxford OX3 7JX, England
基金
英国惠康基金;
关键词
AI; embodiment; consciousness; coupling; agency; moral status; MORAL STATUS; SPECIESISM; INTENTIONALITY; MATTER;
D O I
10.1017/S0963180120001036
中图分类号
R19 [保健组织与事业(卫生事业管理)];
学科分类号
摘要
Embodiment is typically given insufficient weight in debates concerning the moral status of Novel Synthetic Beings (NSBs) such as sentient or sapient Artificial Intelligences (AIs). Discussion usually turns on whether AIs are conscious or self-aware, but this does not exhaust what is morally relevant. Since moral agency encompasses what a being wants to do, the means by which it enacts choices in the world is a feature of such agency. In determining the moral status of NSBs and our obligations to them, therefore, we must consider how their corporeality shapes their options, preferences, values, and is constitutive of their moral universe. Analysing AI embodiment and the coupling between cognition and world, the paper shows why determination of moral status is only sensible in terms of the whole being, rather than mental sophistication alone, and why failure to do this leads to an impoverished account of our obligations to such NSBs.
引用
收藏
页码:479 / 491
页数:13
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] What do we owe to intelligent robots?
    John-Stewart Gordon
    AI & SOCIETY, 2020, 35 : 209 - 223
  • [2] What do we owe to intelligent robots?
    Gordon, John-Stewart
    AI & SOCIETY, 2020, 35 (01) : 209 - 223
  • [3] Group Agents and Moral Status: What Can We Owe to Organizations?
    Lovett, Adam
    Riedener, Stefan
    CANADIAN JOURNAL OF PHILOSOPHY, 2021, 51 (03) : 221 - 238
  • [4] Brain, behavior, and mind: What do we know and what can we know?
    Vanderwolf, CH
    NEUROSCIENCE AND BIOBEHAVIORAL REVIEWS, 1998, 22 (02) : 125 - 142
  • [5] Iatrogenic pneumothorax: What can we do?
    Peron, Karma R.
    Taminato, Monica
    dos Santos, Maria Lucia B. M.
    Delgado, Artur F.
    de Carvalho, Werther B.
    HEART & LUNG, 2015, 44 (05): : 458 - 458
  • [6] What We Say and How We Do: Action, Gesture, and Language in Proving
    Williams-Pierce, Caroline
    Pier, Elizabeth L.
    Walkington, Candace
    Boncoddo, Rebecca
    Clinton, Virginia
    Alibali, Martha W.
    Nathan, Mitchell J.
    JOURNAL FOR RESEARCH IN MATHEMATICS EDUCATION, 2017, 48 (03) : 248 - 260
  • [7] What We Think We Do (to Each Other): How Personality Can Bias Behavior Schemas Through the Projection of If-Then Profiles
    Kammrath, Lara K.
    JOURNAL OF PERSONALITY AND SOCIAL PSYCHOLOGY, 2011, 101 (04) : 754 - 770
  • [8] Why teachers are leaving and what we can do about it
    Marshall, David T.
    Pressley, Tim
    Neugebauer, Natalie M.
    Shannon, David M.
    PHI DELTA KAPPAN, 2022, 104 (01) : 6 - 11
  • [9] Levels of explicability for medical artificial intelligence: What do we normatively need and what can we technically reach?
    Ursin, Frank
    Lindner, Felix
    Ropinski, Timo
    Salloch, Sabine
    Timmermann, Cristian
    ETHIK IN DER MEDIZIN, 2023, 35 (02) : 173 - 199
  • [10] WHAT DO WE REALLY EXPLAIN WHEN WE TRY TO EXPLAIN CONSCIOUSNESS?
    Belyaev, Max
    EPISTEMOLOGY & PHILOSOPHY OF SCIENCE-EPISTEMOLOGIYA I FILOSOFIYA NAUKI, 2015, 44 (02): : 47 - 51