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  2. Ethics of artificial intelligence - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ethics_of_artificial...

    To prevent harm, in addition to regulation, AI-deploying organizations need to play a central role in creating and deploying trustworthy AI in line with the principles of trustworthy AI, and take accountability to mitigate the risks. [80] On 21 April 2021, the European Commission proposed the Artificial Intelligence Act. [81]

  3. Existential risk from artificial intelligence - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Existential_risk_from...

    [5] [148] Social measures are also proposed to mitigate AGI risks, [149] [150] such as a UN-sponsored "Benevolent AGI Treaty" to ensure that only altruistic AGIs are created. [151] Additionally, an arms control approach and a global peace treaty grounded in international relations theory have been suggested, potentially for an artificial ...

  4. Moral blindness - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Moral_blindness

    Moral blindness, also known as ethical blindness, is defined as a person's temporary inability to see the ethical aspect of a decision they are making. It is often caused by external factors due to which an individual is unable to see the immoral aspect of their behavior in that particular situation.

  5. Moral hazard - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Moral_hazard

    In contrast, philosophy and ethics view “moral hazard” from a broader perspective that includes the moral behaviour of individuals and society as a whole. The root cause of “moral hazard” is due to the immoral behaviour of economic agents from a social perspective.

  6. Non-cognitivism - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Non-cognitivism

    Non-cognitivism is the meta-ethical view that ethical sentences do not express propositions (i.e., statements) and thus cannot be true or false (they are not truth-apt). A noncognitivist denies the cognitivist claim that "moral judgments are capable of being objectively true, because they describe some feature of the world."

  7. Cognitive bias mitigation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cognitive_bias_mitigation

    Cognitive bias mitigation is the prevention and reduction of the negative effects of cognitive biases – unconscious, automatic influences on human judgment and decision making that reliably produce reasoning errors. Coherent, comprehensive theories of cognitive bias mitigation are lacking.

  8. Ethics of technology - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ethics_of_technology

    The ethics of technology is a sub-field of ethics addressing ethical questions specific to the technology age, the transitional shift in society wherein personal computers and subsequent devices provide for the quick and easy transfer of information. Technology ethics is the application of ethical thinking to growing concerns as new ...

  9. Naturalistic fallacy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Naturalistic_fallacy

    The term naturalistic fallacy is sometimes used to label the problematic inference of an ought from an is (the is–ought problem). [3] Michael Ridge relevantly elaborates that "[t]he intuitive idea is that evaluative conclusions require at least one evaluative premise—purely factual premises about the naturalistic features of things do not entail or even support evaluative conclusions."