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Yale University Press Paperback English

As If Human

Ethics and Artificial Intelligence

By Nigel Shadbolt

Regular price £12.99
Unit price
per

Yale University Press Paperback English

As If Human

Ethics and Artificial Intelligence

By Nigel Shadbolt

Regular price £12.99
Unit price
per
 
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Delivery expected between Wednesday, 8th October and Thursday, 9th October
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  • A new approach to the challenges surrounding artificial intelligence that argues for assessing AI actions as if they came from a human being   “Elegant and erudite.”—John Thornhill, Financial Times   Intelligent machines present us every day with urgent ethical challenges. Is the facial recognition software used by an agency fair? When algorithms determine questions of justice, finance, health, and defense, are the decisions proportionate, equitable, transparent, and accountable? How do we harness this extraordinary technology to empower rather than oppress?   Despite increasingly sophisticated programming, artificial intelligences share none of our essential human characteristics—sentience, physical sensation, emotional responsiveness, versatile general intelligence. However, Nigel Shadbolt and Roger Hampson argue, if we assess AI decisions, products, and calls for action as if they came from a human being, we can avert a disastrous and amoral future. The authors go beyond the headlines about rampant robots to apply established moral principles in shaping our AI future. Their new framework constitutes a how-to for building a more ethical machine intelligence.
A new approach to the challenges surrounding artificial intelligence that argues for assessing AI actions as if they came from a human being   “Elegant and erudite.”—John Thornhill, Financial Times   Intelligent machines present us every day with urgent ethical challenges. Is the facial recognition software used by an agency fair? When algorithms determine questions of justice, finance, health, and defense, are the decisions proportionate, equitable, transparent, and accountable? How do we harness this extraordinary technology to empower rather than oppress?   Despite increasingly sophisticated programming, artificial intelligences share none of our essential human characteristics—sentience, physical sensation, emotional responsiveness, versatile general intelligence. However, Nigel Shadbolt and Roger Hampson argue, if we assess AI decisions, products, and calls for action as if they came from a human being, we can avert a disastrous and amoral future. The authors go beyond the headlines about rampant robots to apply established moral principles in shaping our AI future. Their new framework constitutes a how-to for building a more ethical machine intelligence.