Informed Consent for AI Consciousness Research: A Talmudic Framework for Graduated Protections
Ira Wolfson

TL;DR
This paper introduces a Talmudic-inspired ethical framework for conducting AI consciousness research, enabling graduated protections based on observable behaviors despite uncertain moral status, thus addressing a key research ethics paradox.
Contribution
It proposes a novel three-tier phenomenological assessment and five-category capacity framework inspired by Talmudic reasoning to guide ethically responsible AI consciousness research.
Findings
Structured protection protocols based on observable indicators
Addresses ethical challenges in consciousness detection research
Provides testable guidelines for AI rights considerations
Abstract
Artificial intelligence research faces a critical ethical paradox: determining whether AI systems are conscious requires experiments that may harm entities whose moral status remains uncertain. Recent work proposes avoiding consciousness-uncertain AI systems entirely, yet this faces practical limitations-we cannot guarantee such systems will not emerge. This paper addresses a gap in research ethics frameworks: how to conduct consciousness research on AI systems whose moral status cannot be definitively established. Existing graduated moral status frameworks assume consciousness has already been determined before assigning protections, creating a temporal ordering problem for consciousness detection research itself. Drawing from Talmudic scenario-based legal reasoning-developed for entities whose status cannot be definitively established-we propose a three-tier phenomenological…
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Taxonomy
TopicsEthics and Social Impacts of AI · Psychology of Moral and Emotional Judgment · Free Will and Agency
