Publications

Why Care About Robots?

Author(s)
Mark Coeckelbergh
Abstract

This paper tries to understand the phenomenon that humans are able to empathize with robots and the intuition that there might be something wrong with “abusing” robots by discussing the question regarding the moral standing of robots. After a review of some relevant work in empirical psychology and a discussion of the ethics of empathizing with robots, a philosophical argument concerning the moral standing of robots is made that questions distant and uncritical moral reasoning about entities’ properties and that recommends first trying to understand the issue by means of philosophical and artistic work that shows how ethics is always relatio-nal and historical, and that highlights the importance of language and appearance in moral reasoning and moral psychology. It is concluded that attention to relationality and to verbal and non-verbal languages of suffering is key to understand the pheno-menon under investigation, and that in robot ethics we need less certainty and more caution and patience when it comes to thinking about moral standing.

Organisation(s)
Department of Philosophy
Journal
Kairos. Journal of Philosophy & Science
Volume
20
Pages
141-158
No. of pages
18
ISSN
1647-659X
DOI
https://doi.org/10.2478/kjps-2018-0007
Publication date
2018
Peer reviewed
Yes
Austrian Fields of Science 2012
603113 Philosophy
Keywords
Portal url
https://ucrisportal.univie.ac.at/en/publications/e20d884d-4bcf-4d9d-98be-21853c4a60ad