A3 Refereed book chapter or chapter in a compilation book

Moral psychology and artificial agents (part one): Ontologically categorizing bio-cultural humans




AuthorsLaakasuo Michael, Sundvall Jukka R.I., Berg Anton, Drosinou Marianna, Herzon Volo, Kunnari Anton, Koverola Mika, Repo Marko, Saikkonen Teemu, Palomäki Jussi

EditorsSteven John Thompson

PublisherIGI Global

Publication year2021

Book title Machine Law, Ethics, and Morality in the Age of Artificial Intelligence

Journal name in sourceMachine Law, Ethics, and Morality in the Age of Artificial Intelligence

First page 166

Last page188

ISBN978-1-79984-894-3

eISBN978-1-79984-895-0

DOIhttps://doi.org/10.4018/978-1-7998-4894-3.ch010

Web address https://doi.org/10.4018/978-1-7998-4894-3.ch010


Abstract

This is the first of two chapters introducing the moral psychology of robots and transhumanism. Evolved moral cognition and the human conceptual system has naturally embedded difficulties in coping with the new moral challenges brought on by emerging future technologies. The reviewed literature outlines our contemporary understanding based on evolutionary psychology of humans as cognitive organisms. The authors then give a skeletal outline of moral psychology. These fields together suggest that there are many innate and cultural mechanisms which influence how we understand technology and have blind spots in recognizing the moral issues related to them. They discuss human tool use and cognitive categories and show how tools have shaped our evolution. The first part closes by introducing a new concept: the new ontological category (NOC i.e. robots and AI), which did not exist in our evolution. They explain how the NOC is fundamentally confounding for our moral cognitive machinery. In part two, they apply the background provided here on recent empirical studies in the moral psychology of robotics and transhumanism.



Last updated on 2024-26-11 at 21:51