An Approach to Computing Ethics
Citations Over TimeTop 10% of 2006 papers
Abstract
To make ethics computable, we've adopted an approach to ethics that involves considering multiple prima facie duties in deciding how one should act in an ethical dilemma. We believe this approach is more likely to capture the complexities of ethical decision making than a single, absolute-duty ethical theory. However, it requires a decision procedure for determining the ethically correct action when the duties give conflicting advice. To solve this problem, we employ inductive-logic programming to enable a machine to abstract information from ethical experts' intuitions about particular ethical dilemmas, to create a decision principle. We've tested our method in the MedEthEx proof-of-concept system, using a type of ethical dilemma that involves 18 possible combinations of three prima facie duties. The system needed just four training cases to create an ethically significant decision principle that covered the remaining cases. This article is part of a special issue on Machine Ethics.
Related Papers
- A Practitioner's Guide to Ethical Decision Making.(1995)
- → A model for making decisions about ethical dilemmas in student assessment(2017)27 cited
- → Exposing Accounting Students to Multiple Factors Affecting Ethical Decision Making(2004)30 cited
- → e-Government Ethics : a Synergy of Computer Ethics, Information Ethics, and Cyber Ethics(2011)14 cited
- → MORAL INTENSITY AND ETHICAL ANALYSIS IN ACCOUNTING DECISION MAKING(2023)1 cited