Virtue and Vice in Our Relationships with Robots: Is There an Asymmetry and How Might it be Explained?

被引:21
|
作者
Sparrow, Robert [1 ,2 ]
机构
[1] Monash Univ, Sch Philosoph Hist & Int Studies, Dept Philosophy, Melbourne, Vic, Australia
[2] Monash Univ, ARC Ctr Excellence Electromat Sci, Melbourne, Vic, Australia
基金
澳大利亚研究理事会;
关键词
Ethics; Robotics; Virtue; Vice; HRI; VIOLENT MEDIA; PORNOGRAPHY; AGGRESSION; RAPE;
D O I
10.1007/s12369-020-00631-2
中图分类号
TP24 [机器人技术];
学科分类号
080202 ; 1405 ;
摘要
In previous work, drawing on virtue ethics, I have argued that we may demonstrate morally significant vices in our treatment of robots. Even if an agent's "cruel" treatment of a robot has no implications for their future behaviour towards people or animals, I believe that it may reveal something about their character, which in turn gives us reason to criticise their actions. Viciousness towards robots is real viciousness. However, I don't have the same intuition about virtuous behaviour. That is to say, I see no reason to think that "kind" treatment of a robot reflects well on an agent's character nor do I have any inclination to praise it. At first sight, at least, this is puzzling: if we should morally evaluate some of our relationships with robots why not all of them? In this paper, I argue that these conflicting intuitions may be reconciled by drawing on further claims about the nature of virtue and vice and the moral significance of self-deception. Neglecting the moral reality of the targets of our actions is little barrier to vice and may sometimes be characteristic of it. However, virtue requires an exercise of practical wisdom that may be vitiated by failure to attend to the distinction between representation and reality. Thus, while enjoying representations of unethical behaviour is unethical, acting out fantasies of good behaviour with robots is, at best morally neutral. Only in the rare circumstance where someone might be forgiven for mistaking a robot for a real animal or person may spontaneous responses to robots be virtuous.
引用
收藏
页码:23 / 29
页数:7
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [11] How will robots integrate into our world?
    Gross, Michael
    CURRENT BIOLOGY, 2017, 27 (06) : R199 - R201
  • [12] How Might Stoic Virtue Ethics Inform Sustainable Clothing Choices?
    Whiting, Kai
    Simpson, Edward
    Carrasco, Angeles
    Dinucci, Aldo
    Konstantakos, Leonidas
    ETHICS POLICY & ENVIRONMENT, 2023, 26 (03) : 455 - 473
  • [13] Does kindness towards robots lead to virtue? A reply to Sparrow’s asymmetry argument
    Mark Coeckelbergh
    Ethics and Information Technology, 2021, 23 : 649 - 656
  • [14] Does kindness towards robots lead to virtue? A reply to Sparrow's asymmetry argument
    Coeckelbergh, Mark
    ETHICS AND INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY, 2021, 23 (04) : 649 - 656
  • [15] How Might Voice Assistants Raise Our Children?
    Biele, Cezary
    Jaskulska, Anna
    Kopec, Wieslaw
    Kowalski, Jaroslaw
    Skorupska, Kinga
    Zdrodowska, Aldona
    INTELLIGENT HUMAN SYSTEMS INTEGRATION 2019, 2019, 903 : 162 - 167
  • [16] VIRTUE, VICE, AND "VORACIOUS" SCIENCE how should we approach the ethics of primate research?
    Walker, Rebecca L.
    PERSPECTIVES IN BIOLOGY AND MEDICINE, 2018, 61 (01) : 130 - 146
  • [17] Excessive Self-Enhancement and Interpersonal Functioning in Roommate Relationships: Her Virtue is His Vice?
    Joiner, Thomas E., Jr.
    Vohs, Kathleen D.
    Katz, Jennifer
    Kwon, Paul
    Kline, John P.
    SELF AND IDENTITY, 2003, 2 (01) : 21 - 30
  • [18] Automated Driving: How It Could Enter Our Cities and How This Might Affect Our Mobility Decisions
    Heinrichs, Dirk
    Cyganski, Rita
    DISP, 2015, 51 (02): : 74 - 79
  • [19] Designing Persuasive Robots: How Robots Might Persuade People Using Vocal and Nonverbal Cues
    Chidambaram, Vijay
    Chiang, Yueh-Hsuan
    Mutlu, Bilge
    HRI'12: PROCEEDINGS OF THE SEVENTH ANNUAL ACM/IEEE INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON HUMAN-ROBOT INTERACTION, 2012, : 293 - 300
  • [20] A byte to eat? How your dinner might soon be grown by robots
    不详
    NEW SCIENTIST, 2023, 246 (3444) : 23 - 23