Machine Ethics
Herausgeber: Anderson, Michael; Anderson, Susan Leigh
Machine Ethics
Herausgeber: Anderson, Michael; Anderson, Susan Leigh
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This volume of collected essays explores developing ethics for machines, in contrast to developing ethics for human beings who use machines.
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This volume of collected essays explores developing ethics for machines, in contrast to developing ethics for human beings who use machines.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Cambridge University Press
- Seitenzahl: 548
- Erscheinungstermin: 7. Januar 2015
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 240mm x 161mm x 34mm
- Gewicht: 982g
- ISBN-13: 9780521112352
- ISBN-10: 0521112354
- Artikelnr.: 33215761
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Books on Demand GmbH
- In de Tarpen 42
- 22848 Norderstedt
- info@bod.de
- 040 53433511
- Verlag: Cambridge University Press
- Seitenzahl: 548
- Erscheinungstermin: 7. Januar 2015
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 240mm x 161mm x 34mm
- Gewicht: 982g
- ISBN-13: 9780521112352
- ISBN-10: 0521112354
- Artikelnr.: 33215761
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Books on Demand GmbH
- In de Tarpen 42
- 22848 Norderstedt
- info@bod.de
- 040 53433511
Part I. The Nature of Machine Ethics: 1. The nature, importance, and
difficulty of machine ethics James Moor; 2. Machine metaethics Susan Leigh
Anderson; 3. Ethics for machines J. Storrs Hall; Part II. The Importance of
Machine Ethics: 4. Why machine ethics? Colin Allen, Wendell Wallach and Iva
Smit; 5. Authenticity in the age of digital companions Sherry Turkel; Part
III. Issues Concerning Machine Ethics: 6. What matters to a machine? Drew
McDermott; 7. Machine ethics and the idea of a more-than-human moral world
Steve Torrance; 8. On computable morality: an examination of machines as
moral advisors Blay Whitby; 9. When is a robot a moral agent? John Sullins;
10. Philosophical concerns with machine ethics Susan Leigh Anderson; 11.
Computer systems: moral ethics but not moral agents Deborah G. Johnson; 12.
On the morality of artificial agents Luciano Floridi; 13. Legal rights for
machines: some fundamental concepts David J. Calverley; Part IV. Approaches
to Machine Ethics: 14. Towards the ethical robot James Gips; 15. Asimov's
laws of robotics: implications for information technology Roger Clarke; 16.
The unacceptability of Asimov's 'three laws of robotics' as a basis for
machine ethics Susan Leigh Anderson; 17. Computational models of ethical
reasoning: challenges, initial steps, and future directions Bruce McLaren;
18. Computational neural modeling and the philosophy of ethics: reflections
on the particularism-generalism debate Marcello Guarini; 19. Architectures
and ethics for robots: constraint satisfaction as a unitary design
framework Alan K. Mackworth; 20. Piagetian roboethics via category theory:
moving beyond mere formal operations to engineer robots whose decisions are
guaranteed to be ethically correct Selmer Bringsjord, Joshua Taylor, Bram
van Heuveln, Konstantine Arkoudas, Micah Clark and Ralph Wojtowicz; 21.
Ethical protocols design Matteo Turilli; 22. Modelling morality with
prospective logic Luis Moniz Pereira and Ari Saptawijaya; 23. An integrated
reasoning approach to moral decision-making Morteza Dehghani, Ken Forbus,
Emmett Tomai and Matthew Klenk; 24. Prototyping n-reasons: a computer
mediated ethics machine Peter Danielson; 25. There is no 'I' in 'robot':
robots and utilitarianism Christopher Grau; 26. Prospects for a Kantian
machine Thomas M. Powers; 27. A prima facie duty approach to machine
ethics: machine learning of features of ethical dilemmas, prima facie
duties and decision principles, through a dialogue with ethicists Susan
Leigh Anderson and Michael Anderson; Part V. Visions for Machine Ethics:
28. What can AI do for ethics? Helen Seville and Debora G. Field; 29.
Ethics for self-improving machines J. Storrs Hall; 30. How machines might
help us to achieve breakthroughs in ethical theory and inspire us to behave
better Susan Leigh Anderson; 31. Homo sapiens 2.0: building the better
robots of our nature Eric Dietrich.
difficulty of machine ethics James Moor; 2. Machine metaethics Susan Leigh
Anderson; 3. Ethics for machines J. Storrs Hall; Part II. The Importance of
Machine Ethics: 4. Why machine ethics? Colin Allen, Wendell Wallach and Iva
Smit; 5. Authenticity in the age of digital companions Sherry Turkel; Part
III. Issues Concerning Machine Ethics: 6. What matters to a machine? Drew
McDermott; 7. Machine ethics and the idea of a more-than-human moral world
Steve Torrance; 8. On computable morality: an examination of machines as
moral advisors Blay Whitby; 9. When is a robot a moral agent? John Sullins;
10. Philosophical concerns with machine ethics Susan Leigh Anderson; 11.
Computer systems: moral ethics but not moral agents Deborah G. Johnson; 12.
On the morality of artificial agents Luciano Floridi; 13. Legal rights for
machines: some fundamental concepts David J. Calverley; Part IV. Approaches
to Machine Ethics: 14. Towards the ethical robot James Gips; 15. Asimov's
laws of robotics: implications for information technology Roger Clarke; 16.
The unacceptability of Asimov's 'three laws of robotics' as a basis for
machine ethics Susan Leigh Anderson; 17. Computational models of ethical
reasoning: challenges, initial steps, and future directions Bruce McLaren;
18. Computational neural modeling and the philosophy of ethics: reflections
on the particularism-generalism debate Marcello Guarini; 19. Architectures
and ethics for robots: constraint satisfaction as a unitary design
framework Alan K. Mackworth; 20. Piagetian roboethics via category theory:
moving beyond mere formal operations to engineer robots whose decisions are
guaranteed to be ethically correct Selmer Bringsjord, Joshua Taylor, Bram
van Heuveln, Konstantine Arkoudas, Micah Clark and Ralph Wojtowicz; 21.
Ethical protocols design Matteo Turilli; 22. Modelling morality with
prospective logic Luis Moniz Pereira and Ari Saptawijaya; 23. An integrated
reasoning approach to moral decision-making Morteza Dehghani, Ken Forbus,
Emmett Tomai and Matthew Klenk; 24. Prototyping n-reasons: a computer
mediated ethics machine Peter Danielson; 25. There is no 'I' in 'robot':
robots and utilitarianism Christopher Grau; 26. Prospects for a Kantian
machine Thomas M. Powers; 27. A prima facie duty approach to machine
ethics: machine learning of features of ethical dilemmas, prima facie
duties and decision principles, through a dialogue with ethicists Susan
Leigh Anderson and Michael Anderson; Part V. Visions for Machine Ethics:
28. What can AI do for ethics? Helen Seville and Debora G. Field; 29.
Ethics for self-improving machines J. Storrs Hall; 30. How machines might
help us to achieve breakthroughs in ethical theory and inspire us to behave
better Susan Leigh Anderson; 31. Homo sapiens 2.0: building the better
robots of our nature Eric Dietrich.
Part I. The Nature of Machine Ethics: 1. The nature, importance, and
difficulty of machine ethics James Moor; 2. Machine metaethics Susan Leigh
Anderson; 3. Ethics for machines J. Storrs Hall; Part II. The Importance of
Machine Ethics: 4. Why machine ethics? Colin Allen, Wendell Wallach and Iva
Smit; 5. Authenticity in the age of digital companions Sherry Turkel; Part
III. Issues Concerning Machine Ethics: 6. What matters to a machine? Drew
McDermott; 7. Machine ethics and the idea of a more-than-human moral world
Steve Torrance; 8. On computable morality: an examination of machines as
moral advisors Blay Whitby; 9. When is a robot a moral agent? John Sullins;
10. Philosophical concerns with machine ethics Susan Leigh Anderson; 11.
Computer systems: moral ethics but not moral agents Deborah G. Johnson; 12.
On the morality of artificial agents Luciano Floridi; 13. Legal rights for
machines: some fundamental concepts David J. Calverley; Part IV. Approaches
to Machine Ethics: 14. Towards the ethical robot James Gips; 15. Asimov's
laws of robotics: implications for information technology Roger Clarke; 16.
The unacceptability of Asimov's 'three laws of robotics' as a basis for
machine ethics Susan Leigh Anderson; 17. Computational models of ethical
reasoning: challenges, initial steps, and future directions Bruce McLaren;
18. Computational neural modeling and the philosophy of ethics: reflections
on the particularism-generalism debate Marcello Guarini; 19. Architectures
and ethics for robots: constraint satisfaction as a unitary design
framework Alan K. Mackworth; 20. Piagetian roboethics via category theory:
moving beyond mere formal operations to engineer robots whose decisions are
guaranteed to be ethically correct Selmer Bringsjord, Joshua Taylor, Bram
van Heuveln, Konstantine Arkoudas, Micah Clark and Ralph Wojtowicz; 21.
Ethical protocols design Matteo Turilli; 22. Modelling morality with
prospective logic Luis Moniz Pereira and Ari Saptawijaya; 23. An integrated
reasoning approach to moral decision-making Morteza Dehghani, Ken Forbus,
Emmett Tomai and Matthew Klenk; 24. Prototyping n-reasons: a computer
mediated ethics machine Peter Danielson; 25. There is no 'I' in 'robot':
robots and utilitarianism Christopher Grau; 26. Prospects for a Kantian
machine Thomas M. Powers; 27. A prima facie duty approach to machine
ethics: machine learning of features of ethical dilemmas, prima facie
duties and decision principles, through a dialogue with ethicists Susan
Leigh Anderson and Michael Anderson; Part V. Visions for Machine Ethics:
28. What can AI do for ethics? Helen Seville and Debora G. Field; 29.
Ethics for self-improving machines J. Storrs Hall; 30. How machines might
help us to achieve breakthroughs in ethical theory and inspire us to behave
better Susan Leigh Anderson; 31. Homo sapiens 2.0: building the better
robots of our nature Eric Dietrich.
difficulty of machine ethics James Moor; 2. Machine metaethics Susan Leigh
Anderson; 3. Ethics for machines J. Storrs Hall; Part II. The Importance of
Machine Ethics: 4. Why machine ethics? Colin Allen, Wendell Wallach and Iva
Smit; 5. Authenticity in the age of digital companions Sherry Turkel; Part
III. Issues Concerning Machine Ethics: 6. What matters to a machine? Drew
McDermott; 7. Machine ethics and the idea of a more-than-human moral world
Steve Torrance; 8. On computable morality: an examination of machines as
moral advisors Blay Whitby; 9. When is a robot a moral agent? John Sullins;
10. Philosophical concerns with machine ethics Susan Leigh Anderson; 11.
Computer systems: moral ethics but not moral agents Deborah G. Johnson; 12.
On the morality of artificial agents Luciano Floridi; 13. Legal rights for
machines: some fundamental concepts David J. Calverley; Part IV. Approaches
to Machine Ethics: 14. Towards the ethical robot James Gips; 15. Asimov's
laws of robotics: implications for information technology Roger Clarke; 16.
The unacceptability of Asimov's 'three laws of robotics' as a basis for
machine ethics Susan Leigh Anderson; 17. Computational models of ethical
reasoning: challenges, initial steps, and future directions Bruce McLaren;
18. Computational neural modeling and the philosophy of ethics: reflections
on the particularism-generalism debate Marcello Guarini; 19. Architectures
and ethics for robots: constraint satisfaction as a unitary design
framework Alan K. Mackworth; 20. Piagetian roboethics via category theory:
moving beyond mere formal operations to engineer robots whose decisions are
guaranteed to be ethically correct Selmer Bringsjord, Joshua Taylor, Bram
van Heuveln, Konstantine Arkoudas, Micah Clark and Ralph Wojtowicz; 21.
Ethical protocols design Matteo Turilli; 22. Modelling morality with
prospective logic Luis Moniz Pereira and Ari Saptawijaya; 23. An integrated
reasoning approach to moral decision-making Morteza Dehghani, Ken Forbus,
Emmett Tomai and Matthew Klenk; 24. Prototyping n-reasons: a computer
mediated ethics machine Peter Danielson; 25. There is no 'I' in 'robot':
robots and utilitarianism Christopher Grau; 26. Prospects for a Kantian
machine Thomas M. Powers; 27. A prima facie duty approach to machine
ethics: machine learning of features of ethical dilemmas, prima facie
duties and decision principles, through a dialogue with ethicists Susan
Leigh Anderson and Michael Anderson; Part V. Visions for Machine Ethics:
28. What can AI do for ethics? Helen Seville and Debora G. Field; 29.
Ethics for self-improving machines J. Storrs Hall; 30. How machines might
help us to achieve breakthroughs in ethical theory and inspire us to behave
better Susan Leigh Anderson; 31. Homo sapiens 2.0: building the better
robots of our nature Eric Dietrich.