DocumentCode
1260955
Title
Conative Dimensions of Machine Ethics: A Defense of Duty
Author
Guarini, Marcelo
Author_Institution
Dept. of Philos., Univ. of Windsor, Windsor, ON, Canada
Volume
3
Issue
4
fYear
2012
Firstpage
434
Lastpage
442
Abstract
Immanuel Kant is one of the giants of moral theorizing in the western philosophical tradition. He developed a view of moral imperatives and duty that continues to inspire thought up to the present. In a thought-provoking series of papers, Anthony Beavers argues that Kant´s conception of morality will not be applicable to machines. In other words, it will turn out that when we design machines at a level of sophistication such that ethical constraints must be built into their behavior, Kant´s understanding of morality will not be helpful. Specifically, the notion of duty as involving some sort of internal conflict can be jettisoned. The argument in this paper is that there are aspects of duty that can be preserved for machine ethics. The goal will not be to defend any of the details of Kant´s position. Rather, it is to motivate some ways of thinking about duty that may be useful for machine ethics.
Keywords
ethical aspects; Kant morality concept; conative dimension; duty notion; ethical constraint; internal conflict; machine ethics; moral duty; moral imperative; western philosophical tradition; Cognition; Emotion recognition; Ethics; Human factors; Man machine systems; Robots; Desire-obligation conflict; duty; ethics; machine ethics; obligation-obligation conflict;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Affective Computing, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
1949-3045
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/T-AFFC.2012.27
Filename
6263246
Link To Document