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Time Machines: Artificial Intelligence, Process, and Narrative

Mark Coeckelbergh

2021Philosophy & Technology45 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract While today there is much discussion about the ethics of artificial intelligence (AI), less work has been done on the philosophical nature of AI. Drawing on Bergson and Ricoeur, this paper proposes to use the concepts of time, process, and narrative to conceptualize AI and its normatively relevant impact on human lives and society. Distinguishing between a number of different ways in which AI and time are related, the paper explores what it means to understand AI as narrative, as process, or as the emergent outcome of processes and narratives. It pays particular attention to what it calls the “narrator” and “time machine” roles of AI and the normative implications of these roles. It argues that AI processes and narratives shape our time and link past, present, and future in particular ways that are ethically and politically significant.

Topics & Concepts

NarrativePhilosophy of technologyNormativeProcess (computing)EpistemologySociologyProcess philosophyOutcome (game theory)Philosophy of scienceCognitive scienceArtificial intelligenceComputer sciencePsychologyPhilosophyLinguisticsMathematical economicsMathematicsOperating systemNeuroethics, Human Enhancement, Biomedical InnovationsEthics and Social Impacts of AISpace Science and Extraterrestrial Life
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