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Re: F6 post# 227717

Monday, 09/01/2014 3:06:43 AM

Monday, September 01, 2014 3:06:43 AM

Post# of 480711
Computing and Moral Responsibility

.. aha, one that has been sitting on tab for about a week, lost and refound couple of times, haven't read much yet and don't know if i ever will read it all ..

First published Wed Jul 18, 2012

Traditionally philosophical discussions on moral responsibility have focused on the human components in moral action. Accounts of how to ascribe moral responsibility usually describe human agents performing actions that have well-defined, direct consequences. In today's increasingly technological society, however, human activity cannot be properly understood without making reference to technological artifacts, which complicates the ascription of moral responsibility (Jonas 1984; Waelbers 2009).[1] As we interact with and through these artifacts, they affect the decisions that we make and how we make them (Latour 1992). They persuade, facilitate and enable particular human cognitive processes, actions or attitudes, while constraining, discouraging and inhibiting others. For instance, internet search engines prioritize and present information in a particular order, thereby influencing what Internet users get to see. As Verbeek points out, such technological artifacts are “active mediators” that “actively co-shape people's being in the world: their perception and actions, experience and existence” (2006, p. 364). As active mediators, they change the character of human action and as a result it challenges conventional notions about how to distribute moral responsibility (Jonas 1984; Johnson 2001).

Computing presents a particular case for understanding the role of technology in moral responsibility. As these technologies become a more integral part of daily activities, automate more decision-making processes and continue to transform the way people communicate and relate to each other, they further complicate the already problematic tasks of attributing moral responsibility. The growing pervasiveness of computer technologies in everyday life, the growing complexities of these technologies and the new possibilities that they provide raise new kinds of questions: who is responsible for the information published on the Internet? Who is accountable when electronic records are lost or when they contain errors? To what extent and for what period of time are developers of computer technologies accountable for untoward consequences of their products? And as computer technologies become more complex and behave increasingly autonomous can or should humans still be held responsible for the behavior of these technologies?

This entry will first look at the challenges that computing poses to conventional notions of moral responsibility. The discussion will then review two different ways in which various authors have addressed these challenges: 1) by reconsidering the idea of moral agency and 2) by rethinking the concept of moral responsibility itself.

* 1. Challenges to moral responsibility
* 1.1 Causal contribution
* 1.2 Considering the consequences
* 1.3 Free to act
* 2. Can computers be moral agents?
* 2.1 Computers as morally responsible agents
* 2.2 Creating autonomous moral agents
* 2.3 Expanding the concept of moral agency
3. Rethinking the concept of moral responsibility

[...]

1. Challenges to moral responsibility

it kinda fits here .. much more .. http://plato.stanford.edu/entries/computing-responsibility/


It was Plato who said, “He, O men, is the wisest, who like Socrates, knows that his wisdom is in truth worth nothing”

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