, The Outline; The unnatural ethics of AI could be its undoing
"When I used to teach philosophy at universities, I always resented 
having to cover the Trolley Problem, which struck me as everything the 
subject should not be: presenting an extreme situation, wildly detached 
from most dilemmas the students would normally face, in which our agency
 is unrealistically restricted, and using it as some sort of ideal model
 for ethical reasoning (the first model of ethical reasoning that many 
students will come across, no less). Ethics should be about things like 
the power structures we enter into at work, what relationships we decide
 to pursue, who we are or want to become — not this fringe-case 
intuition-pump nonsense.
But maybe I’m wrong. Because, if we 
believe tech gurus at least, the Trolley Problem is about to become of 
huge real-world importance. Human beings might not find themselves in 
all that many Trolley Problem-style scenarios over the course of their 
lives, but soon we're going to start seeing self-driving cars on our 
streets, and they're going to have to make these judgments all the time.
 Self-driving cars are potentially going to find themselves in all sorts
 of accident scenarios where the AI controlling them has to decide which
 human lives it ought to preserve. But in practice what this means is 
that human beings will have to grapple with the Trolley Problem — since they're going to be responsible for programming the AIs...
I'm much more sympathetic to the “AI is bad” line. We have little reason
 to trust that big tech companies (i.e. the people responsible for 
developing this technology) are doing it to help us, given how wildly 
their interests diverge from our own."
The Paperback version of my Bloomsbury book "Ethics, Information, and Technology" will be published on Nov. 13, 2025; the Ebook on Dec. 11; and the Hardback and Cloth versions on Jan. 8, 2026. Preorders are available via Amazon and this Bloomsbury webpage: https://www.bloomsbury.com/us/ethics-information-and-technology-9781440856662/
Showing posts with label AI is good v. AI is bad. Show all posts
Showing posts with label AI is good v. AI is bad. Show all posts
Tuesday, January 29, 2019
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