Practical Challenges in Explicit Ethical Machine Reasoning
Abstract
We examine implemented systems for ethical machine reasoning with a view to identifying the practical challenges (as opposed to philosophical challenges) posed by the area. We identify a need for complex ethical machine reasoning not only to be multi-objective, proactive, and scrutable but that it must draw on heterogeneous evidential reasoning. We also argue that, in many cases, it needs to operate in real time and be verifiable. We propose a general architecture involving a declarative ethical arbiter which draws upon multiple evidential reasoners each responsible for a particular ethical feature of the system's environment. We claim that this architecture enables some separation of concerns among the practical challenges that ethical machine reasoning poses.
Cite
@article{arxiv.1801.01422,
title = {Practical Challenges in Explicit Ethical Machine Reasoning},
author = {Louise Dennis and Michael Fisher},
journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1801.01422},
year = {2018}
}
Comments
In proceedings International Conference on Artificial Intelligence and Mathematics, Fort Lauderdale, Florida, FL. 3-5 January, 2018