Scholars have primarily approached the issue of AI moral agency from the perspectives of consciousness and intentionality (Chalmers, 1997; Johnson, 2006; Searle, 1992) or by considering various functional substitutes for these faculties (Coeckelbergh, 2010, 2020; Floridi & Sanders, 2004; Himma, 2009). In this paper, I add to the existing literature to show the value of exploring the application of the reactive attitudes approach to AI moral agency (Antill, 2024; Rebera, 2024; Sars, 2022; Smith &…
Read moreScholars have primarily approached the issue of AI moral agency from the perspectives of consciousness and intentionality (Chalmers, 1997; Johnson, 2006; Searle, 1992) or by considering various functional substitutes for these faculties (Coeckelbergh, 2010, 2020; Floridi & Sanders, 2004; Himma, 2009). In this paper, I add to the existing literature to show the value of exploring the application of the reactive attitudes approach to AI moral agency (Antill, 2024; Rebera, 2024; Sars, 2022; Smith & Vickers, 2021; Tigard, 2021; Tollon, 2023). Reactive attitudes are attitudes we hold towards each other in everyday interactions with respect to our belief about each other’s quality of will. Accordingly, to hold people morally responsible is to adopt and express these attitudes in moral practice. In the existent attempts to use this framework to investigate AI moral agency, scholars have mostly focused on the capacities that AIs must possess to be considered apt recipients of reactive attitude. I adopt the reversal methodology by focusing on AIs as apt expressers of reactive attitudes. This methodology can allow us to draw resources from emotion research across philosophy, psychology, and computer science. My thesis is that because it is possible to attribute reactive attitudes to AIs, allowing them to engage in reactive attitudes exchange with humans in the shared moral community, they may be considered as moral agents and thus held accountable for their actions.