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Articles

Correlation of Christian ethics and developments in artificial intelligence

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Pages 1635-1645 | Received 02 Feb 2022, Accepted 19 Jul 2022, Published online: 27 Jul 2022
 

ABSTRACT

In the traditional understanding, Christian ethics touches upon issues of morality and the general structure of a human as a person. At the same time, Christian ethics does not touch upon questions and does not impose restrictions on the development of scientific principles and methodological structures of knowledge of the surrounding world. That is, Christian ethics allows and encourages the exploration of created space. The novelty of the study is fact that the understanding of the importance of artificial intelligence is based primarily on the belief that there is a need to develop boundaries where artificial intelligence is capable of making a decision that will not be approved by humans. The authors show that the creation of such a technology runs counter to the values of a religious nature and Christianity, in particular, due to the representation of freedom of technology, which has moral convictions not based on the principles of humanism. The study compares and develops the main criteria for correlating the sufficiency of ethical norms and the requirements of technological advancement. A promising question for further discussion is the question of the artificial intelligence's deliberate lack of attachment to a particular morality, including extreme or aggressive worldviews.

Disclosure statement

No potential conflict of interest was reported by the author(s).

Additional information

Notes on contributors

Zheng Chen

Zheng Chen is a PhD, Senior Lecturer at the Yuelu Academy of Hunan University; Researcher at the Institute of Art and Design of the Guilin University of Electronic Technology. The author’s research interests include technology management, artificial intelligence, computing and cultural heritage and robotic systems.

Yu He

Yu He is a PhD, Senior Lecturer at the Institute of Art and Design of the Guilin University of Electronic Technology. The author’s major research interests lie in the area of responsible innovations, ethical theory and moral practice, intelligent systems.

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