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DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20241122T092000
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UID:submissions.supercomputing.org_SC24_sess768_ws_esphpc103@linklings.com
SUMMARY:Decision Procedures for Artificial Moral Agents
DESCRIPTION:Tyler Cook (Georgia Institute of Technology)\n\nWhenever one c
 onsiders the possibility of designing ethical artificial intelligence (AI)
 , it is tempting to think that the success of such a project would depend 
 on whether systems could be built to implement the same kinds of ethical d
 ecision-making procedures as the ones we regard as appropriate for humans.
  This paper calls into question the foregoing line of thought. It argues t
 hat (i) the appropriateness of a decision procedure for a given moral agen
 t depends on the nature of the agent’s capacities; (ii) AIs and humans pos
 sess capacities that differ in their nature; and (iii) if (i) and (ii), th
 en the appropriate decision procedures for AIs are different from the ones
  that are appropriate for humans. The temptation to design ethical AI that
  employs the same decision procedures as humans should be resisted, lest w
 e miss out on the benefits that could be gained from AI that utilizes dist
 inct procedures.\n\nTag: Artificial Intelligence/Machine Learning, Broader
  Engagement, HPC in Society\n\nRegistration Category: Workshop Reg Pass\n\
 nSession Chairs: Javier Gomez-Lavin (Purdue University, University of Pitt
 sburgh); Nathaniel Kremer-Herman (Seattle University, Hanover College); Ja
 y Lofstead (Sandia National Laboratories, University of New Mexico); Jakob
  Luettgau (French Institute for Research in Computer Science and Automatio
 n (INRIA)); Elaine M. Raybourn (Sandia National Laboratories); and William
  Schonbein (Sandia National Laboratories)\n\n
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