English

Normative Epistemology for Lethal Autonomous Weapons Systems

Human-Computer Interaction 2021-10-26 v1 Artificial Intelligence

Abstract

The rise of human-information systems, cybernetic systems, and increasingly autonomous systems requires the application of epistemic frameworks to machines and human-machine teams. This chapter discusses higher-order design principles to guide the design, evaluation, deployment, and iteration of Lethal Autonomous Weapons Systems (LAWS) based on epistemic models. Epistemology is the study of knowledge. Epistemic models consider the role of accuracy, likelihoods, beliefs, competencies, capabilities, context, and luck in the justification of actions and the attribution of knowledge. The aim is not to provide ethical justification for or against LAWS, but to illustrate how epistemological frameworks can be used in conjunction with moral apparatus to guide the design and deployment of future systems. The models discussed in this chapter aim to make Article 36 reviews of LAWS systematic, expedient, and evaluable. A Bayesian virtue epistemology is proposed to enable justified actions under uncertainty that meet the requirements of the Laws of Armed Conflict and International Humanitarian Law. Epistemic concepts can provide some of the apparatus to meet explainability and transparency requirements in the development, evaluation, deployment, and review of ethical AI.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.2110.12935,
  title  = {Normative Epistemology for Lethal Autonomous Weapons Systems},
  author = {Susannah Kate Devitt},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2110.12935},
  year   = {2021}
}

Comments

30 pages, published in Lethal Autonomous Weapons: Re-Examining the Law and Ethics of Robotic Warfare. Oxford University Press 2021

R2 v1 2026-06-24T07:09:46.230Z