Full bibliography
Zombies and Robots
Resource type
Book Section
Authors/contributors
- Jecker, Nancy (Author)
- Atuire, Caesar (Author)
- Jekcer, Nancy S. (Editor)
- Atuire, Caesar A. (Editor)
Title
Zombies and Robots
Abstract
Chapter 5 explores the moral standing of various forms of artificial intelligence (AI). It introduces this topic using the provocative example of zombies to consider whether entities without sentience or consciousness could be morally considerable. The chapter argues that personhood could emerge for non-conscious AI provided it is incorporated in the human community and acts in consistently pro-social ways. It applies this insight to large language models, social robots, and characters from film and fiction. The analysis reveals strong affinities between Emergent and African views. Both hold that non-humans can acquire personhood under certain conditions irrespective of consciousness. By contrast, utilitarianism and Kantian philosophies require consciousness. After replying to objections, Chapter 5 concludes that we could make a person by building an artificial agent that was pro-social and deploying it in ways that foster positive machine-human relationships.
Book Title
What Is a Person?: Untapped Insights from Africa
Publisher
Oxford University Press
Date
2025-01-01
Pages
0
ISBN
978-0-19-769092-5
Accessed
4/25/25, 11:25 AM
Library Catalog
Silverchair
Extra
Citation
Jecker, N., & Atuire, C. (2025). Zombies and Robots. In N. S. Jekcer & C. A. Atuire (Eds.), What Is a Person?: Untapped Insights from Africa (p. 0). Oxford University Press. https://doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780197690925.003.0006
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