Abstract

Contemporary ethical analysis of Artificial Intelligence (AI) is growing rapidly. One of its most recognizable outcomes is the publication of a number of ethics guidelines that, intended to guide governmental policy, address issues raised by AI design, development, and implementation and generally present a set of recommendations. Here we propose two things: first, regarding content, since some of the applied issues raised by AI are related to fundamental questions about topics like intelligence, consciousness, and the ontological and ethical status of humans, among others, the treatment of these issues would benefit from interfacing with neuroethics that has been addressing those same issues in the context of brain research. Second, the identification and management of some of the practical ethical challenges raised by AI would be enriched by embracing the methodological resources used in neuroethics. In particular, we focus on the methodological distinction between conceptual and action-oriented neuroethical approaches. We argue that the normative (often principles-oriented) discussion about AI will benefit from further integration of conceptual analysis, including analysis of some operative assumptions, their meaning in different contexts, and their mutual relevance in order to avoid misplaced or disproportionate concerns and achieve a more realistic and useful approach to identifying and managing the emerging ethical issues.

Highlights

  • Artificial Intelligence (AI) research is growing rapidly raising various ethical issues related to safety, risks, trust, transparency, and accountability, widely discussed in the literature [1]

  • One of the most recognizable outcomes of the ethical discussion is the publication of a number of guidelines intended to provide operational recommendations in response to the issues raised by AI design, development, and implementation [2,3,4,5,6,7]

  • We suggest that the identification and management of some of the practical ethical challenges raised by AI and AI-assisted technologies would be enriched by embracing some of the methodological resources of neuroethics

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Summary

Introduction

AI research is growing rapidly raising various ethical issues related to safety, risks, trust, transparency, and accountability (among others), widely discussed in the literature [1]. One of the most recognizable outcomes of the ethical discussion is the publication of a number of guidelines intended to provide operational recommendations in response to the issues raised by AI design, development, and implementation [2,3,4,5,6,7]. Absent in the ethical discussion, is a consideration of whether the identification and management of many of those issues and the related regulation could benefit from the interfacing of AI ethics with other relevant fields such as neuroethics

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82. Changeux 1986
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