Higher Seminar in Practical Philosophy: Isaac Taylor

Seminar

Date: Tuesday 11 October 2022

Time: 13.15 – 15.00

Location: D700

Collective Responsibility and Artificial Intelligence

Abstract

The use of artificial intelligence to make high-stakes decisions is sometimes thought to create a troubling responsibility gap – that is, a situation where nobody can be held morally responsible for the outcomes that are brought about. However, philosophers and practitioners have recently claimed that, although no individual can be held morally responsible, groups of individuals might be. Consequently, they think, we have less to fear from the use of AI than might appear to be the case. This paper assesses this claim. Drawing on existing philosophical models of collective responsibility, I consider whether changing focus from the individual to the collective level can help us identify a locus of responsibility in a greater range of cases of AI deployment. I ultimately find that appeal to collective responsibility will be of limited use in filling the responsibility gap.