Responses to a Critique of Artificial Moral Agents
Adam Poulsen, Michael Anderson, Susan L. Anderson, Ben Byford, Fabio, Fossa, Erica L. Neely, Alejandro Rosas, Alan Winfield

TL;DR
This paper responds to a critique of artificial moral agents by discussing diverse reasons for their development, emphasizing the value of scientific study despite differing opinions on their necessity and ethical implications.
Contribution
It provides a multi-perspective response to a critique of AMA motivations, highlighting the diversity of reasons among researchers and affirming the importance of studying AMAs.
Findings
Researchers have varied reasons for developing AMAs.
Not all authors agree with the critique's reasons.
The scientific study of AMAs remains valuable despite disagreements.
Abstract
The field of machine ethics is concerned with the question of how to embed ethical behaviors, or a means to determine ethical behaviors, into artificial intelligence (AI) systems. The goal is to produce artificial moral agents (AMAs) that are either implicitly ethical (designed to avoid unethical consequences) or explicitly ethical (designed to behave ethically). Van Wynsberghe and Robbins' (2018) paper Critiquing the Reasons for Making Artificial Moral Agents critically addresses the reasons offered by machine ethicists for pursuing AMA research; this paper, co-authored by machine ethicists and commentators, aims to contribute to the machine ethics conversation by responding to that critique. The reasons for developing AMAs discussed in van Wynsberghe and Robbins (2018) are: it is inevitable that they will be developed; the prevention of harm; the necessity for public trust; the…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
Taxonomy
TopicsEthics and Social Impacts of AI · Psychology of Moral and Emotional Judgment · Neuroethics, Human Enhancement, Biomedical Innovations
