Transcript EECS 690

EECS 690
April 19
Approaches to incorporating ethics
into software
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Deontic Logic
Analogical Reasoning
Casuistry
Disobedience Conditions
Deontic Logic
• This is a kind of logic whose rules of
operation instantiate the rules of a dutybased ethical system. These systems are
capable of constructing proofs in deontic
logic.
• This is not an autonomous application,
and is entirely top-down, but it could be a
very effective kind of decision support tool,
and could be a good place to start.
Limitations
• Deontic logic, more than any other type of logic,
is dependent on the content represented by its
symbols. Proofs in deontic logic look much like
proofs in any other modal logic, but arguments
in deontic logic look peculiarly unuseful.
• This is probably not a prospect for making a
genuine moral system, but it may be a
necessary skill for any top-down implementation.
Analogical Reasoning
• This is and has always been a powerful tool in
the philosopher’s arsenal.
• The idea is that by constructing or identifying a
case that people are clear about and in
agreement about, and comparing its relevant
similarities to cases we are undecided about, we
can make up our minds about the undecided or
difficult cases. (There are many examples of this
reasoning everywhere.)
Casuistry
• Casuistry is the rigorous application of case
studies to tease out general commonalities in
the way that certain cases are treated.
• This approach has been interesting to see
develop in practical ethics curricula. Case
studies are a very important way of teaching
ethical practices.
• As a DST, this approach looks very promising
indeed.
The Ross Model
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Duties stemming from one's own previous actions:
1. fidelity - duty to fulfill (explicit and implicit) promises/agreements
into
which one has entered
2. reparation - duty to make up for wrongful acts previously done to others
Duties stemming from the previous actions of others:
3. gratitude - duty to repay others for past favors done for oneself
Duties stemming from the (possibility of) a mismatch between persons' pleasure or
happiness and their "merit":
4. justice - duty to prevent or correct such a mismatch
Duties stemming from the possibility of improving the conditions of others with
respect to virtue, intelligence, or pleasure:
5. beneficence - duty to improve the conditions of others in these respects
Duties stemming from the possibility of improving one's own condition with respect to
virtue or intelligence:
6. self-improvement - duty to improve one's own condition in these respects
Special duty to be distinguished from the duty of beneficence:
7. nonmaleficence - duty not to injure others
Casuistry and value pluralism
• This kind o approach does a great job in
making formal statements about what
conditions seem to warrant the preference
of one value over another.
• Conflicts between legitimate values
represent the heart of many of our most
difficult ethical disputes.
Limitations of Casuistry/Analogical
Reasoning
• We have yet to build a system which
parses “relevant similarity” in a sufficiently
humanlike way.
• DST’s which are largely dependent on
these methods by necessity have no
autonomy, but this requires that the
persons using the DST have a fair level of
ethical training themselves.
Disobedience Conditions
• To have a moral machine is in some ways
to have a machine that will disobey under
suitable conditions.
• To go further, and provide cues to the user
of when the machine needs to prioritize its
goals is a really nice step toward
incorporating machines into legitimate
moral communication. (See example
pp.134-135)