AI and human society

被引:1
作者
Gelepithis P.A.M. [1 ,2 ]
机构
[1] Kingston University, Kingston upon Thames
[2] Kingston University
关键词
Artificial intelligence; Free time; Human nature; Human-centred education; Human-machine boundary; Work;
D O I
10.1007/BF01174784
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
This paper considers the impact of the AI R&D programme on human society and the individual human being on the assumption that a full realisation of the engineering objective of AI, namely, construction of human-level, domain-independent intelligent entities, is possible. Our assumption is essentially identical to the maximum progress scenario of the Office of Technology Assessment, US Congress. Specifically, the first section introduces some of the significant issues on the relational nexus among work, education and the human-machine boundary. In particular, based on a Russellian conception of rationality I briefly argue that we need to change our related conceptions of work, employment and free time, through a new human-centred education. On the human-machine boundary problem, I make a couple of tentative suggestions and put forward some crucial open questions. Section two discusses the impact of the emerging machine intelligence on human nature both as modification of its self-image, keeping human nature itself unchanged, and its potential for altering human nature itself. I briefly argue that: (i) in a certain context, the question of the supremacy or uniqueness of human intelligence loses much, if not all, of its 'weight'; and (ii) appearance of Robot-X species would immortalise the human spirit. © 1999 Springer-Verlag London Limited.
引用
收藏
页码:312 / 321
页数:9
相关论文
共 50 条
[21]   AI as a boss? A national US survey of predispositions governing comfort with expanded AI roles in society [J].
Kate K. Mays ;
Yiming Lei ;
Rebecca Giovanetti ;
James E. Katz .
AI & SOCIETY, 2022, 37 :1587-1600
[22]   AI4people-an ethical framework for a good AI society: the Ghana (Ga) perspective [J].
Ammah, Laud Nii Attoh ;
Luetge, Christoph ;
Kriebitz, Alexander ;
Ramkissoon, Lavina .
JOURNAL OF INFORMATION COMMUNICATION & ETHICS IN SOCIETY, 2024, 22 (04) :453-465
[23]   AI as super-controversy: Eliciting AI and society controversies with an extended expert community in the UK [J].
Marres, Noortje ;
Castelle, Michael ;
Gobbo, Beatrice ;
Poletti, Chiara ;
Tripp, James .
BIG DATA & SOCIETY, 2024, 11 (02)
[24]   Designing for human rights in AI [J].
Aizenberg, Evgeni ;
van den Hoven, Jeroen .
BIG DATA & SOCIETY, 2020, 7 (02)
[25]   The human factor and the AI in dermatology [J].
Todorova, Lidiya .
JOURNAL OF EVALUATION IN CLINICAL PRACTICE, 2025, 31 (02)
[26]   AI takeover and human disempowerment [J].
Bales, Adam .
PHILOSOPHICAL QUARTERLY, 2025, 75 (03) :791-811
[27]   Human-Centered AI: A Framework for Green and Sustainable AI [J].
Shin, Donghee ;
Shin, Emily Y. .
COMPUTER, 2023, 56 (06) :16-25
[28]   AI AND THE GROUNDS FOR HUMAN RIGHTS [J].
Eisikovits, Nir .
ETICA & POLITICA, 2022, 24 (03) :451-463
[29]   Human cognition and the AI revolution [J].
Paulson, Steve ;
Grosz, Barbara J. ;
Antonsen, Roger .
ANNALS OF THE NEW YORK ACADEMY OF SCIENCES, 2019, 1458 (01) :26-43
[30]   HUMAN IDENTIFICATION USING AI [J].
Sharma, Purushottam ;
Khan, Aazar Imran ;
Jain, Samyak .
MECHATRONIC SYSTEMS AND CONTROL, 2024, 52 (02) :65-75