Publication | Closed Access
Autonomous Vehicles and the Attribution of Moral Responsibility
62
Citations
28
References
2018
Year
Ethics In Knowledge RepresentationMoral ReasoningMoral DilemmaEngineeringMoral PracticeMoral NormsAutonomous VehiclesMoral ResponsibilityResponsible TechnologyMoral IssueLawApplied EthicNormative EthicSocial SciencesMoral PsychologyRisk DecisionsMoral Judgment
With the imminent advent of autonomous vehicles (AVs) comes a moral dilemma: How do people assign responsibility in the event of a fatal accident? AVs necessarily create conditions in which “drivers” yield agency to a machine. The current study examines how people make attributions of blame and praise in this context. Varying the features of AV technology affected how responsible a “driver” (who purchased the vehicle) is perceived to be following a deadly crash. The findings provide support for agency and commission as crucial bases of moral judgment. They also raise questions about how morally contradictory actions are perceived and underscore the need for research examining how moral responsibility is distributed among multiple potentially culpable agents. Pragmatically, these findings suggest that regulating (or declining to regulate) how AVs are programmed may strongly influence perceptions of moral and legal culpability.
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