Sami Moustachir
2 min readSep 30, 2016

Following a seminar course on science and ethics, the following papers will be dealing on the relations between robots, or intelligent systems, and humans, in a series called Ethics in AI. Check previous part here.

What to expect in the future of human-machine interactions?

No matter the form, Artificial Intelligence comes with great challenges regarding basic ethical questions. We saw that those difficulties come from the way we manage to actually define what is an intelligent machine so we can better interact with them. Rapid advances in computing completely turned upside down the efficiency of machines and we have seen an evolution in the mentality about AI through culture and art. Machines that can both act for good or evil.

Moore’s Law

Inspired by Moore’s law that theorizes and predicts the exponential growth of the capacity in integrated circuits, Ray Kurzweil explains in The Singularity is Near that the exponential growth of progress should bring a new paradigm that defies human understanding. He calls it the Singularity. One could imagine that such event would unravel any concept we had so far about ethics in AI. Indeed, how could we define a proper moral status for those systems when we can’t even understand them.

Obviously, you could criticize such point of view and see the growth more like a logistic function. In that case, it will be convenient to have ethical rules for when the growth will stabilize. Given the time, roboticists will be able to have a better understanding of AI and its implications, allowing to have a common ground on basic ethical questions. The only biggest error that could arise is the will to impose the same standardized human ethics to the current and the next generation of robots, as it would imply that we are the same species when we should actually consider any artificial intelligence revolution as the birth of a new specie.

Sami Moustachir

Data lover, AI thinker, Founder @biasimpact.org. Eating knowledge one bit at a time 🍎. http://samimoustachir.com