Title: The Ethics of Creating Artificial Consciousness
Abstract:The purpose of this essay is to raise the prospect that engaging in artificial consciousness research, research that aims to create artifactual entities with conscious states of certain kinds, might b...The purpose of this essay is to raise the prospect that engaging in artificial consciousness research, research that aims to create artifactual entities with conscious states of certain kinds, might be unethical on grounds that it wrongs or will very likely wrong the subjects of such research. I say might be unethical because, in the end, it will depend on how those entities are created and how they are likely to be treated. This essay is meant to be a starting point in thinking about the ethics of artificial consciousness research ethics, not, by any means, the final word on such matters. While the ethics of the creation and proliferation of artificial intelligences and artificial consciousnesses (see, for example, (Chalmers 2010) has often been explored both in academic settings and in popular media and literature, those discussions tend to focus on the consequences for humans or, at most, the potential rights of machines that are very much like us. However, the subjects of artificial consciousness research, at least those subjects that end up being conscious in particular ways, are research subjects in the way that sentient non-human animals or human subjects are research subjects and so should be afforded appropriate protections. Therefore, it is important to ask not only whether artificial consciousnesses that are integrated into our society should be afforded moral and legal protections and whether they are a risk to our safety or existence, but whether the predecessors to such consciousnesses are wronged in their creation or in the research involving them. In section 2, I discuss what it means for a being to have moral status and make the case that artificial consciousnesses of various kinds will have moral status if they come to exist. I then take up the issue of whether it is thereby wrong to create such entities (section 3). It might seem obvious that the answer is “no”, or at least it is no more impermissible than the creation and use of non-human research subjects. However, I argue that there should be a presumption against the creation of artificial consciousnesses.Read More
Publication Year: 2013
Publication Date: 2013-01-01
Language: en
Type: article
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Cited By Count: 13
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