First Steps Towards an Ethics of Robots and Artificial Intelligence

Abstract

This article offers an overview of the main first-order ethical questions raisedby robots and Artificial Intelligence (RAIs) under five broad rubrics: functionality,inherent significance, rights and responsibilities, side-effects, and threats. The first letter of each rubric taken together conveniently generates the acronym FIRST. Special attention is given to the rubrics of functionality and inherent significance given the centrality of the former and the tendency to neglect the latter in virtue of its somewhat nebulous and contested character. In addition to exploring some illustrative issues arising under each rubric, the article also emphasizes a number of more general themes. These include: the multiplicity of interacting levels on which ethical questions about RAIs arise, the need to recognise that RAIs potentially implicatethe full gamut of human values (rather than exclusively or primarily some readilyidentifiable sub-set of ethical or legal principles), and the need for practically salientethical reflection on RAIs to be informed by a realistic appreciation of their existingand foreseeable capacities

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This paper was published in King's Research Portal.

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Licence: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/