Confucius, Cyberpunk and Mr. Science: Comparing AI ethics between China and the EU
Pascale Fung, Hubert Etienne

TL;DR
This paper compares AI ethics principles from China and the EU, revealing cultural and philosophical differences that influence their interpretation and application, despite surface similarities.
Contribution
It provides a detailed analysis of the underlying cultural and philosophical roots of AI ethical principles in China and the EU, highlighting differences in their meanings and goals.
Findings
Chinese and EU principles differ in interpretation despite similar wording
Cultural and political contexts shape ethical priorities and understanding
Differences reflect distinct societal goals and philosophical backgrounds
Abstract
The exponential development and application of artificial intelligence triggered an unprecedented global concern for potential social and ethical issues. Stakeholders from different industries, international foundations, governmental organisations and standards institutions quickly improvised and created various codes of ethics attempting to regulate AI. A major concern is the large homogeneity and presumed consensualism around these principles. While it is true that some ethical doctrines, such as the famous Kantian deontology, aspire to universalism, they are however not universal in practice. In fact, ethical pluralism is more about differences in which relevant questions to ask rather than different answers to a common question. When people abide by different moral doctrines, they tend to disagree on the very approach to an issue. Even when people from different cultures happen to…
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Taxonomy
TopicsEthics and Social Impacts of AI · Neuroethics, Human Enhancement, Biomedical Innovations · Law, AI, and Intellectual Property
