Taking Turing by Surprise? Designing Digital Computers for morally-loaded contexts
Sylvie Delacroix

TL;DR
This paper explores how digital computers can be designed to challenge human moral complacency by inducing surprise, emphasizing the importance of normative engagement and highlighting fundamental differences in moral adaptation between humans and machines.
Contribution
It introduces normative principles for decision-support systems to promote moral surprise and discusses the asymmetry in moral change mechanisms between humans and artificial agents.
Findings
Decision-support systems should be designed to provoke moral surprise.
Humans and machines have fundamentally different mechanisms for moral change.
This asymmetry may lead to divergent and potentially incompatible moral outlooks.
Abstract
There is much to learn from what Turing hastily dismissed as Lady Lovelace s objection. Digital computers can indeed surprise us. Just like a piece of art, algorithms can be designed in such a way as to lead us to question our understanding of the world, or our place within it. Some humans do lose the capacity to be surprised in that way. It might be fear, or it might be the comfort of ideological certainties. As lazy normative animals, we do need to be able to rely on authorities to simplify our reasoning: that is ok. Yet the growing sophistication of systems designed to free us from the constraints of normative engagement may take us past a point of no-return. What if, through lack of normative exercise, our moral muscles became so atrophied as to leave us unable to question our social practices? This paper makes two distinct normative claims: 1. Decision-support systems should be…
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Taxonomy
TopicsEthics and Social Impacts of AI · Psychology of Moral and Emotional Judgment · Neuroethics, Human Enhancement, Biomedical Innovations
