2 Characteristics of Artificial Intelligent Agents (AIA)
... moral code in the behaviour of artificial intelligent systems needs a specific form of human and artificial intelligence, not just an abstract intelligence. We present intelligence as a system with an internal structure and the structural levels of the moral system, as well as certain characteristic ...
... moral code in the behaviour of artificial intelligent systems needs a specific form of human and artificial intelligence, not just an abstract intelligence. We present intelligence as a system with an internal structure and the structural levels of the moral system, as well as certain characteristic ...
Artificial Intelligence and Moral intelligence
... moral code in the behaviour of artificial intelligent systems needs a specific form of human and artificial intelligence, not just an abstract intelligence. We present intelligence as a system with an internal structure and the structural levels of the moral system, as well as certain characteristic ...
... moral code in the behaviour of artificial intelligent systems needs a specific form of human and artificial intelligence, not just an abstract intelligence. We present intelligence as a system with an internal structure and the structural levels of the moral system, as well as certain characteristic ...
Conscience
... things because we feel we ‘have to’ or ‘should’, that is the Superego talking. When we do good things because we ‘want to’ and feel a need to do them out of love, it’s our conscience. Which one would Kant believe in, as the guiding force of goodness, the ‘Superego or the conscience? Three Senses of ...
... things because we feel we ‘have to’ or ‘should’, that is the Superego talking. When we do good things because we ‘want to’ and feel a need to do them out of love, it’s our conscience. Which one would Kant believe in, as the guiding force of goodness, the ‘Superego or the conscience? Three Senses of ...
role of Traditional African moral values
... and beliefs that are expected in acts of worship such a prayer and ritual. Nigosian (1995) defines religion as the feelings, conducts and beliefs which are essential in all adorations in human morality. Its essence is the means by which God as spirit and man's essential-self communicate. Idowu (1973 ...
... and beliefs that are expected in acts of worship such a prayer and ritual. Nigosian (1995) defines religion as the feelings, conducts and beliefs which are essential in all adorations in human morality. Its essence is the means by which God as spirit and man's essential-self communicate. Idowu (1973 ...
Apes with a Moral Code? Primatology, Moral Sentimentalism, and
... In a later scene, for example, Caesar witnesses an angry neighbor accost his human “grandfather,” Charles Rodman, who suffers from Alzheimer’s and has mistakenly entered, and damaged, the neighbor’s car. Caesar perceives one of his caretakers to be in danger, cannot control his anger, and brutally, ...
... In a later scene, for example, Caesar witnesses an angry neighbor accost his human “grandfather,” Charles Rodman, who suffers from Alzheimer’s and has mistakenly entered, and damaged, the neighbor’s car. Caesar perceives one of his caretakers to be in danger, cannot control his anger, and brutally, ...
Mgmt 308 Chap007 - Cal State LA
... Some question whether his sentence was fair. Ebbers is seen now as unethical, a criminal, and deficient as a leader. ...
... Some question whether his sentence was fair. Ebbers is seen now as unethical, a criminal, and deficient as a leader. ...
Report Information from ProQuest - Ethics In The Helping Professions
... time, we understand ourselves as being unified beings, in part because, since the Enlightenment, the understanding of the healthy self has been mat of persons having a fixed core identity. Therefore, individuals have notions of an internalized ideal self (Benjamin, 1995) in which certain ways of beh ...
... time, we understand ourselves as being unified beings, in part because, since the Enlightenment, the understanding of the healthy self has been mat of persons having a fixed core identity. Therefore, individuals have notions of an internalized ideal self (Benjamin, 1995) in which certain ways of beh ...
Applied to negotiation
... and cultures determine what is ethically appropriate and acceptable for themselves and then indoctrinate new members as they are socialized into fabric of the community. • Social contract ethics focus on what individuals owe to their community and what they can or should expect in return. • As appli ...
... and cultures determine what is ethically appropriate and acceptable for themselves and then indoctrinate new members as they are socialized into fabric of the community. • Social contract ethics focus on what individuals owe to their community and what they can or should expect in return. • As appli ...
Lecture 5: Consequential and Deontological Ethics:
... . To act morally you must be motivated exclusively by rational commitment to the universal moral law or the categorical Imperative: “Act in conformity with that maxim, and that maxim only, that you can will at the same time be a universal law.” Right actions flow out of right principles Do the act t ...
... . To act morally you must be motivated exclusively by rational commitment to the universal moral law or the categorical Imperative: “Act in conformity with that maxim, and that maxim only, that you can will at the same time be a universal law.” Right actions flow out of right principles Do the act t ...
Corrections Academy 110KB Jan 19 2015 10:37:24 AM
... • Correctional Officers must at all times, and at all levels, exhibit professional attitudes and conduct – High esteem and sound moral values promote and sustain conduct consistent w/the highest ideals of a profession ...
... • Correctional Officers must at all times, and at all levels, exhibit professional attitudes and conduct – High esteem and sound moral values promote and sustain conduct consistent w/the highest ideals of a profession ...
The Role of Antagonism in Kant`s Metaphysic of
... “[L]awgiving reason…forces from me immediate respect. Although I don not yet see what this respect is based upon… (“Groundwork” 58). But As Körner says, Kant’s statement that respect for moral laws is a motive for adopting them may seem incompatible with his central thesis that moral laws determine ...
... “[L]awgiving reason…forces from me immediate respect. Although I don not yet see what this respect is based upon… (“Groundwork” 58). But As Körner says, Kant’s statement that respect for moral laws is a motive for adopting them may seem incompatible with his central thesis that moral laws determine ...
Introduction - CatholiCurrent.com
... totality of the foreseeable consequences [or circumstances] of that act….”32 They assert one may not deem an action good or evil until one considers all dimensions of an act, including the circumstances and intention which leads one to, for example, use contraception.33 Proportionalists’ argument c ...
... totality of the foreseeable consequences [or circumstances] of that act….”32 They assert one may not deem an action good or evil until one considers all dimensions of an act, including the circumstances and intention which leads one to, for example, use contraception.33 Proportionalists’ argument c ...
Value Based Decision Making
... itself in habitual action. Honesty, for example, can not consist in telling the truth only once. It is integrally related to practical wisdom – is the whole of what a person needs in order to live well – as a trait of character that is essential for leading a satisfying life (amassing wealth and pow ...
... itself in habitual action. Honesty, for example, can not consist in telling the truth only once. It is integrally related to practical wisdom – is the whole of what a person needs in order to live well – as a trait of character that is essential for leading a satisfying life (amassing wealth and pow ...
Ethics and Rhetorical Communication
... of society with respect to ethical behavior, we cannot be ethical or unethical. Therefore, “ethics is a matter of the conscious choices a person makes.” People must choose to do wrong before we can condemn them as being unethical or immoral. The only meaningful way we can evaluate the ethics of a so ...
... of society with respect to ethical behavior, we cannot be ethical or unethical. Therefore, “ethics is a matter of the conscious choices a person makes.” People must choose to do wrong before we can condemn them as being unethical or immoral. The only meaningful way we can evaluate the ethics of a so ...
Ethics and Social Responsibility
... There is one and only one social responsibility of business—to use its resources and engage in activities designed to increase its profits so long as it stays within the rules of the game, which is to say, engages in open and free competition without deception or fraud. ...
... There is one and only one social responsibility of business—to use its resources and engage in activities designed to increase its profits so long as it stays within the rules of the game, which is to say, engages in open and free competition without deception or fraud. ...
KAUSALITÄT UND MOTIVATION BEI EDITH STEIN
... need of the wanting. The Husserl’s formula of the categorical imperative reflects it so: “act according to the best knowledge and conscience”. And as both the best knowing and the best conscience are something which is acquired with moral experience, the unconditioned means here an inalienable guide ...
... need of the wanting. The Husserl’s formula of the categorical imperative reflects it so: “act according to the best knowledge and conscience”. And as both the best knowing and the best conscience are something which is acquired with moral experience, the unconditioned means here an inalienable guide ...
Is Global Poverty a Moral Problem for Citizens of Affluent Societies
... there is no personal responsibility. Consider the role that white citizens played in sustaining apartheid in South Africa. The contribution of many individual whites to sustaining this unjust system was small and their contribution varied, but this does not mean that they lacked responsibility for a ...
... there is no personal responsibility. Consider the role that white citizens played in sustaining apartheid in South Africa. The contribution of many individual whites to sustaining this unjust system was small and their contribution varied, but this does not mean that they lacked responsibility for a ...
Ethics for the Information Age - Chapter 2
... Actions should be guided by moral laws Moral laws are universal Morality must be based on reason Can explain why something is right or wrong ...
... Actions should be guided by moral laws Moral laws are universal Morality must be based on reason Can explain why something is right or wrong ...
Sir William David Ross: (1877
... 2. Significant Points of Ross’ Model B. There is an absolute obligation to obey the prima facie duty that is the most “weightiest” in a given situation. These prima facie duties will assist in determining the content of the moral ought. 1. These duties are not all-inclusive. 2. They are not in a pr ...
... 2. Significant Points of Ross’ Model B. There is an absolute obligation to obey the prima facie duty that is the most “weightiest” in a given situation. These prima facie duties will assist in determining the content of the moral ought. 1. These duties are not all-inclusive. 2. They are not in a pr ...
This paper utilises lines of ethical argumentation to
... create norms through which future decisions could be made. Dialogue between all concerned would perhaps be the best and fairest way to settle the decision in the interest of all parties. This is a view supported by Jurgen Habermas on the basis that no pressure is applied to any party (Fisher & Lovel ...
... create norms through which future decisions could be made. Dialogue between all concerned would perhaps be the best and fairest way to settle the decision in the interest of all parties. This is a view supported by Jurgen Habermas on the basis that no pressure is applied to any party (Fisher & Lovel ...
Team-based Performance Changes
... – What is right, fair, and just for another individual (without having to evaluate the consequences or use religion)? ...
... – What is right, fair, and just for another individual (without having to evaluate the consequences or use religion)? ...
16. Ethics
... • Legitimate authority must be derived from the consent of the governed • All members of a society are bound to respect a sovereign will by the social contract • We surrender some freedoms to a sovereign in return for the benefits of the rule of law that protect individuals from being harmed by othe ...
... • Legitimate authority must be derived from the consent of the governed • All members of a society are bound to respect a sovereign will by the social contract • We surrender some freedoms to a sovereign in return for the benefits of the rule of law that protect individuals from being harmed by othe ...