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Other Minds, Other Intelligences: The Problem of Attributing Agency to Machines

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  17 September 2019

Abstract

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Type
Commentary
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 2019 

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References

Notes

1. Harris, J. Reading the minds of those who never lived. Enhanced beings: The social and ethical challenges posed by super intelligent AI and reasonably intelligent humans. Cambridge Quarterly of Healthcare Ethics 2019;28(4):585–91.Google Scholar

2. Gunkel D. Robot Rights. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press; 2018.

3. Harris, J. Who owns my autonomous vehicle? Ethics and responsibility in artificial and human intelligence. Cambridge Quarterly of Health Care Ethics 2018;27(4):599609.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed

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6. I mention Roomba here because some people treat Roomba in anthropomorphizing ways, such as giving it names and displaying gratitude to and concern for Roomba. See Scheutz, M. The inherent dangers in unidirectional emotional bonds between humans and social robots. In: Lin, P, Abney, K, & Jenkins, R, eds. Robot Ethics: The Social and Ethical Implications of Robotics. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press; 2012, at 205–21.Google Scholar

7. See note 1, Harris 2019.

8. See, for instance, Dennett, D. From Bacteria to Bach and Back Again. Cambridge MA: Harvard University Press; 2017;Google Scholar and Heyes, C. Cognitive Gadgets . Oxford: Oxford University Press; 2018.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

9. Kwiatkowski, R, Lipson, H. Task-agnostic self-modeling machines. Science Robotics 2019;4(26) eaau9354CrossRefGoogle Scholar

12. See, for instance, Sharkey, N. Mama Mia It’s Sophia: A show robot or dangerous platform to mislead? Forbes Magazine, November 17, 2018; available at https://www.forbes.com/sites/noelsharkey/2018/11/17/mama-mia-its-sophia-a-show-robot-or-dangerous-platform-to-mislead/#5cc17e007ac9Google Scholar (last accessed 5 April 2019).

13. For an overview of the ethics literature on self-driving cars, see Nyholm, S. The ethics of crashes with self-driving cars: A roadmap, I-II. Philosophy Compass 2018;13(7):e12507–e12506.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

14. For example, Robots, Danaher J., law and the retribution gap. Ethics and Information Technology 2016;18(4):299309.Google Scholar

15. A 2015 Ted talk in which Google’s Chris Urmson claims that Google cars are able to do this s available at https:// www.ted.com/talks/chris_urmson_how_a_driverless_car_sees_the_road)

16. See note 1, Harris 2019, at 587.

17. See note 1, Harris 2019, at 590. Incidentally, Lily, Frank and I discuss the topic of robot sex and consent in our ‘Robot sex and consent: is consent to sex between a robot and a human conceivable, possible, and desirable?Artificial Intelligence and Law 2017;25(3):305–23Google Scholar

18. See, for instance, Nijssen, SRR, Müller, BCN, van Baaren, RB, Paulus, M. Saving the robot or the human? Robots who feel deserve moral care. Social Cognition 2019;37(1):4152.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

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21. See note 19, Gunkel, 2018. Also, Coeckelbergh M, Robot rights? Towards a social-relational justification of moral consideration. Ethics and Information Technology 2010;12(3):209–21.Google Scholar

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23. Darling, K, Who’s Johnny? Anthropomorphic framing in human-robot interaction, integration, and policy in Lin, P, Abney, K, Jenkins, R, eds. Robot Ethics 2.0: From Autonomous Cars to Artificial Intelligence. New York: Oxford University Press; 2016, at 173–91.Google Scholar

24. Richardson, K. The asymmetrical ‘relationship’: Parallels between prostitution and the development of sex robots. SIGCAS Computers & Society 2015;45(3):290–3.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

25. See note 19, Gunkel 2018.

26. Many thanks to Tomi Kushner for her feedback and helpful suggestions.