Ethical consequences of autonomous AI: Challenges for empiricist and rationalist philosophy of mind

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Ethical consequences of autonomous AI : Challenges for empiricist and rationalist philosophy of mind. / Lo Presti, Patrizio Ulf Enrico.

In: Humana Mente, Vol. 13, No. 37, 2020, p. 19-39.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Lo Presti, PUE 2020, 'Ethical consequences of autonomous AI: Challenges for empiricist and rationalist philosophy of mind', Humana Mente, vol. 13, no. 37, pp. 19-39. <https://www.humanamente.eu/index.php/HM/article/view/311>

APA

Lo Presti, P. U. E. (2020). Ethical consequences of autonomous AI: Challenges for empiricist and rationalist philosophy of mind. Humana Mente, 13(37), 19-39. https://www.humanamente.eu/index.php/HM/article/view/311

Vancouver

Lo Presti PUE. Ethical consequences of autonomous AI: Challenges for empiricist and rationalist philosophy of mind. Humana Mente. 2020;13(37):19-39.

Author

Lo Presti, Patrizio Ulf Enrico. / Ethical consequences of autonomous AI : Challenges for empiricist and rationalist philosophy of mind. In: Humana Mente. 2020 ; Vol. 13, No. 37. pp. 19-39.

Bibtex

@article{289b0937779d41db8816a85560bf1faa,
title = "Ethical consequences of autonomous AI: Challenges for empiricist and rationalist philosophy of mind",
abstract = "The possibility of autonomous artificially intelligent systems (AAIs) has awaken a well-known worry in the scientific community as well as in popular imaginary: the possibility that beings which have gained autonomous intelligence either turn against their creators or at least make the moral and ethical superiority of creators with respect to the created questionable. The present paper argues that such worries are wrong-headed. Specifically, if AAIs raise a worry about human ways of life or human value it is a worry for a certain human way of thinking about what it is to be human. What is threatened is a way of thinking about what it is to be human, not human ways of life or human value.",
author = "{Lo Presti}, {Patrizio Ulf Enrico}",
year = "2020",
language = "English",
volume = "13",
pages = "19--39",
journal = "Humana Mente",
issn = "1972-1293",
publisher = "Edizioni ETS",
number = "37",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Ethical consequences of autonomous AI

T2 - Challenges for empiricist and rationalist philosophy of mind

AU - Lo Presti, Patrizio Ulf Enrico

PY - 2020

Y1 - 2020

N2 - The possibility of autonomous artificially intelligent systems (AAIs) has awaken a well-known worry in the scientific community as well as in popular imaginary: the possibility that beings which have gained autonomous intelligence either turn against their creators or at least make the moral and ethical superiority of creators with respect to the created questionable. The present paper argues that such worries are wrong-headed. Specifically, if AAIs raise a worry about human ways of life or human value it is a worry for a certain human way of thinking about what it is to be human. What is threatened is a way of thinking about what it is to be human, not human ways of life or human value.

AB - The possibility of autonomous artificially intelligent systems (AAIs) has awaken a well-known worry in the scientific community as well as in popular imaginary: the possibility that beings which have gained autonomous intelligence either turn against their creators or at least make the moral and ethical superiority of creators with respect to the created questionable. The present paper argues that such worries are wrong-headed. Specifically, if AAIs raise a worry about human ways of life or human value it is a worry for a certain human way of thinking about what it is to be human. What is threatened is a way of thinking about what it is to be human, not human ways of life or human value.

M3 - Journal article

VL - 13

SP - 19

EP - 39

JO - Humana Mente

JF - Humana Mente

SN - 1972-1293

IS - 37

ER -

ID: 333390401