Oxford Handbook of Ethics of AI / edited by M. Dubber and others. [Electronic Resource]
Material type: Computer filePublication details: New York : OUP, 2020Description: xiv, 881pISBN:- 9780190067397
- 174.900 63Â D851O
Item type | Home library | Collection | Call number | Status | Notes | Date due | Barcode | Item holds | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
e-Book | S. R. Ranganathan Learning Hub Online | Reference | 174.900 63 D851O (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available (e-Book For Access) | Platform : Oxford Academic | EB0684 |
Browsing S. R. Ranganathan Learning Hub shelves, Shelving location: Online, Collection: Reference Close shelf browser (Hides shelf browser)
128 M336O The Oxford Handbook of Philosophy of Cognitive Science | 153 R534C The Cambridge Handbook of Situated Cognition | 153 Ze37C The Cambridge Handbook of Consciousness | 174.900 63 D851O Oxford Handbook of Ethics of AI | 201.77 J419R Routledge Handbook of Religion and Ecology | 332 L528R Routledge Handbook of Social and Sustainable Finance | 519 R115H Handbook of Model Predictive Control |
This book explores the intertwining domains of artificial intelligence (AI) and ethics-two highly divergent fields which at first seem to have nothing to do with one another. AI is a collection of computational methods for studying human knowledge, learning, and behavior, including by building agents able to know, learn, and behave. Ethics is a body of human knowledge-far from completely understood-that helps agents (humans today, but perhaps eventually robots and other AIs) decide how they and others should behave. Despite these differences, however, the rapid development in AI technology today has led to a growing number of ethical issues in a multitude of fields, ranging from disciplines as far-reaching as international human rights law to issues as intimate as personal identity and sexuality. In fact, the number and variety of topics in this volume illustrate the width, diversity of content, and at times exasperating vagueness of the boundaries of "AI Ethics" as a domain of inquiry. Within this discourse, the book points to the capacity of sociotechnical systems that utilize data-driven algorithms to classify, to make decisions, and to control complex systems. Given the wide-reaching and often intimate impact these AI systems have on daily human lives, this volume attempts to address the increasingly complicated relations between humanity and artificial intelligence. It considers not only how humanity must conduct themselves toward AI but also how AI must behave toward humanity.
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