Format | Paperback |
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A Legal Theory for Autonomous Artificial Agents
$62.03 Save:$15.00(20%)
Available in stock
Print length: | 262 pages |
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Language: | English |
Publisher: | University of Michigan Press |
Publication date: | 18 July 2011 |
Dimensions: | 15.24 x 2.54 x 22.86 cm |
ISBN-10: | 0472051458 |
ISBN-13: | 978-0472051458 |
Description
“An extraordinarily good synthesis from an amazing range of philosophical, legal, and technological sources . . . the book will appeal to legal academics and students, lawyers involved in e-commerce and cyberspace legal issues, technologists, moral philosophers, and intelligent lay readers interested in high tech issues, privacy, and robotics.” —Kevin Ashley, University of Pittsburgh School of Law As corporations and government agencies replace human employees with online customer service and automated phone systems, we become accustomed to doing business with nonhuman agents. If artificial intelligence (AI) technology advances as today’s leading researchers predict, these agents may soon function with such limited human input that they appear to act independently. When they achieve that level of autonomy, what legal status should they have? Samir Chopra and Laurence F. White present a carefully reasoned discussion of how existing philosophy and legal theory can accommodate increasingly sophisticated AI technology. Arguing for the legal personhood of an artificial agent, the authors discuss what it means to say it has “knowledge” and the ability to make a decision. They consider key questions such as who must take responsibility for an agent’s actions, whom the agent serves, and whether it could face a conflict of interest. —- ISBN: 9780472051458 | ISBN10: 0472051458 | ISBN-13: 978-0472051458