The Value of Consciousness and Free Will in a Technological Dystopia

Authors

  • Allan McCay University of Sydney Law School

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.55613/jeet.v28i1.69

Abstract

Yuval Noah Harari warns of a very pessimistic future for our species: essentially, that it may be superseded by non-conscious Artificial Intelligence that can do anything we can and more. This assumes that we are physically instantiated algorithms that can be improved on in all respects. On such an assumption, our labor will become economically worthless once AI reaches a certain level. This picture, however, changes markedly if we accept the views of David Hodgson in respect of consciousness, free will, what he calls plausible reasoning, and the relationship among these. On Hodgson’s account, there will always be valuable skills requiring a particular kind of judgment that are possessed by humans, but not by non-conscious algorithmic machines, however advanced.

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Published

2018-09-01

How to Cite

The Value of Consciousness and Free Will in a Technological Dystopia. (2018). Journal of Ethics and Emerging Technologies, 28(1), 18-30. https://doi.org/10.55613/jeet.v28i1.69

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