•  52
    Review of Wendell Wallach, Colin Allen, Moral Machines: Teaching Robots Right From Wrong (review)
    Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews 2009 (3). 2009.
  •  51
    This book explores the role of artificial intelligence in the development of a claim that morality is person-made and rational. Professor Danielson builds moral robots that do better than amoral competitors in a tournament of games like the Prisoners Dilemma and Chicken. The book thus engages in current controversies over the adequacy of the received theory of rational choice. It sides with Gauthier and McClennan, who extend the devices of rational choice to include moral constraint. Artificial …Read more
  •  125
    Is game theory good for us? This may seem an odd question. In the strict sense, game theory—the axiomatic account of interaction between rational agents—is as morally neutral as arithmetic. But the popularization of game theory as a way of thinking about social interaction is far from neutral. Consider the contrast between characterizing bargaining over distribution as a “zero-sum society” and focussing on “win-win” cooperative solutions. These reflections bring us to the book under review, Pris…Read more
  •  91
    Engaging the Public in the Ethics of Robots for War and Peace
    Philosophy and Technology 24 (3): 239-249. 2011.
    Emerging technologies like robotics for war and peace stress our moral norms and generate much public interest and controversy. We use this interest to attract participants to an innovative on-line survey platform, designed for experimenting with public engagement in the ethics of technology. In particular, the N-Reasons platform addresses several issues in democratic ethics: the cost of public participation, the methodological issue of feasible reflective ethical equilibrium (how can individual…Read more
  •  1
    David Miller, Anarchism (review)
    Philosophy in Review 5 207-210. 1985.
  •  179
    Mixed views about radical life extension
    Etikk I Praksis - Nordic Journal of Applied Ethics 1 (1): 87-110. 2015.
    Background: Recent studies on public attitudes toward life extension technologies show a mix of ambivalence toward and support for extending the human lifespan. Attitudes toward genetic modification of organisms and technological enhancements may be used to categorize individuals according to political or ideological orientation such as technoprogressive or conservative and it could be easy to assume that these categories are related to more general categorizations related to culture, e.g. betwe…Read more
  •  84
    Robots for the rest of us or the 'best' of us?
    Ethics and Information Technology 1 (1): 75-81. 1999.
  •  129
    Learning to cooperate: Reciprocity and self-control
    Behavioral and Brain Sciences 25 (2): 256-257. 2002.
    Using a simple learning agent, we show that learning self-control in the primrose path experiment does parallel learning cooperation in the prisoner's dilemma. But Rachlin's claim that “there is no essential difference between self-control and altruism” is too strong. Only iterated prisoner's dilemmas played against reciprocators are reduced to self-control problems. There is more to cooperation than self-control and even altruism in a strong sense.
  •  59
    Critical Notice
    Canadian Journal of Philosophy 28 (4): 627-652. 1998.
  •  103
    Rationality and evolution
    In Alfred R. Mele & Piers Rawling (eds.), The Oxford handbook of rationality, Oxford University Press. pp. 417--437. 2004.
    Rationality and evolution are apparently quite different, applying, respectively, to the acts of complex, well-informed individuals and to populations of what may be mindlessly simple entities. So it is remarkable that evolutionary game theory shows the theory of rational agents and that of populations of replicating strategies to be isomorphic. Danielson illustrates its main concepts—evolutionarily stable strategies and replicator dynamics—with simple models that apply to biological and social …Read more
  •  52
    Artificial Intelligence and Natural Man (review)
    Philosophy of the Social Sciences 12 (1): 105-106. 1982.