• Justifying Blame: Why Free Will Matters and Why it Does Not (review)
    Algemeen Nederlands Tijdschrift voor Wijsbegeerte 1. 2006.
    This book shows why we can justify blaming people for their wrong actions even if free will turns out not to exist. Contrary to most contemporary thinking, we do this by focusing on the ordinary, everyday wrongs each of us commits, not on the extra-ordinary, “morally monstrous-like” crimes and weak-willed actions of some.
  • Wider den Transhumanismus
    with Georg Franck, Sarah Spiekermann, Peter Hampson, Charles M. Ess, and Johannes Hoff
    Neue Zürcher Zeitung. forthcoming.
    Mit der Entwicklung von Gen-, Nanotechnologie und Neurotechnolgie bekommt die Menschheit mehr und mehr die Mittel in die Hand, sich in Eigenregie evolutionär weiterzuentwickeln. Das ist gefährlich.
  • Moral Craftsmanship
    In Seana Moran, David Cropley & James Kaufman (eds.), The Ethics of Creativity, Palgrave-macmillan. pp. 46-61. 2014.
  • Risk Emotions and Risk Judgments
    In Sabine Roeser (ed.), Emotions and Risky Technologies, Springer. pp. 213-230. 2010.
  • Automatisierungstechnik, Social Media und Smartphones beeinflussen nicht nur unseren Alltag, sondern verändern auch die Art und Weise, wie wir denken.
  • Like other teletechnological practices, drone fighting as remote fighting gives rise to a paradox with regard to the relation between ethics and distance: on the one hand, it bridges physical distance in the sense that it enables spying on people and killing people in other parts of the world. On the other hand, it seems to increase moral distance: if you are far away from your target, it becomes easier to kill. However, based on interviews with drone crew as published in the media, I show that …Read more
  • Avoid diluting democracy by algorithms
    with Henrik Skaug Saetra and Harald Borgebund
    Nature Machine Intelligence 4 804-806. 2022.
    There is a tendency among AI researchers to use the concepts of democracy and democratization in ways that are only loosely connected to their political and historical meanings. We argue that it is important to take the concept more seriously in AI research by engaging with political philosophy.
  • Talking to Robots
    On the Linguistic Construction of Personal Human-Robot Relations. 2011.
    How should we make sense of 'personal' human-robot relations, given that many people view robots as 'mere machines'? This paper proposes that we understand human-robot relations from a phenomenological view as social relations in which robots are constructed as quasi-others. It is argued that language mediates in this construction. Responding to research by Turkle and others, it is shown that our talking to robots reveals a shift from an impersonal third-person to a personal second-person perspe…Read more