We live in an information environment. Artificial Intelligence is now all around us and affects all aspects of our lives. It allows us to communicate with just about anybody on the planet, diagnoses illness very effectively, helps with fraud detection and largescale environmental analysis. It records our online habits and makes recommendations, and sometimes even writes school essays.
This course sets out to provide an introduction to the philosophy of artificial intelligence and the philosophical issues that emerge out of the development of current and future AI systems.
These developments produce a myriad of questions and concerns. In what sense is artificial intelligence a form of intelligence? Is acting as if intelligent the same as being intelligent? Are human brain processes essentially computations? Can a machine be conscious, self-aware, a person? Can we build AI and align it with our values and ethics? If so, what ethical system do we choose? Can computers achieve so-called singularity, namely a form of intelligence that far surpasses human intelligence? Does this moment pose an existential treat to humanity?
This course is part of The Oxford Experience summer school, held at Christ Church.