TY - JOUR
T1 - The Aristotelian robot
T2 - Towards a moral phenomenology of artificial social agents
AU - Mendieta, Eduardo
AU - Wagner, Alan Richard
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© Philosophy Today.
PY - 2024/3/1
Y1 - 2024/3/1
N2 - In this essay an engineer and a philosopher, after many conversations, develop an argument for why the Aristotelian version of virtue ethics is the most promising way to develop what we call artificial moral, social agents, i.e., robots. This, evidently, applies to humans as well. There are several claims: first, that humans are not born moral, they are socialized into morality; second, that morality involves affect, emotion, feeling, before it engages reason; third, that how a moral being feels is related to some narrative, whether moral or not; and finally, that narrativity is what builds a sense of a “moral” I, namely an authorial moral self.
AB - In this essay an engineer and a philosopher, after many conversations, develop an argument for why the Aristotelian version of virtue ethics is the most promising way to develop what we call artificial moral, social agents, i.e., robots. This, evidently, applies to humans as well. There are several claims: first, that humans are not born moral, they are socialized into morality; second, that morality involves affect, emotion, feeling, before it engages reason; third, that how a moral being feels is related to some narrative, whether moral or not; and finally, that narrativity is what builds a sense of a “moral” I, namely an authorial moral self.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85192815238&partnerID=8YFLogxK
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U2 - 10.5840/philtoday202448527
DO - 10.5840/philtoday202448527
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85192815238
SN - 0031-8256
VL - 68
SP - 327
EP - 340
JO - Philosophy Today
JF - Philosophy Today
IS - 2
ER -