Show Summary Details
- Title Pages
- List of Contributors
- Introduction
-
1 Fire and Forget: A Moral Defense of the Use of Autonomous Weapons Systems in War and Peace -
2 The Robot Dogs of War -
3 Understanding AI and Autonomy: Problematizing the Meaningful Human Control Argument against Killer Robots -
4 The Humanitarian Imperative for Minimally-Just AI in Weapons -
5 Programming Precision? Requiring Robust Transparency for AWS -
6 May Machines Take Lives to Save Lives? Human Perceptions of Autonomous Robots (with the Capacity to Kill) -
7 The Better Instincts of Humanity: Humanitarian Arguments in Defense of International Arms Control -
8 Toward a Positive Statement of Ethical Principles for Military AI -
9 Empirical Data on Attitudes Toward Autonomous Systems -
10 The Automation of Authority: Discrepancies with Jus Ad Bellum Principles -
11 Autonomous Weapons and the Future of Armed Conflict -
12 Autonomous Weapons and Reactive Attitudes -
13 Blind Brains and Moral Machines: Neuroscience and Autonomous Weapon Systems -
14 Enforced Transparency: A Solution to Autonomous Weapons as Potentially Uncontrollable Weapons Similar to Bioweapons -
15 Normative Epistemology for Lethal Autonomous Weapons Systems -
16 Proposing a Regional Normative Framework for Limiting the Potential for Unintentional or Escalatory Engagements with Increasingly Autonomous Weapon Systems -
17 The Human Role in Autonomous Weapon Design and Deployment - Index
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- Title Pages
- List of Contributors
- Introduction
-
1 Fire and Forget: A Moral Defense of the Use of Autonomous Weapons Systems in War and Peace -
2 The Robot Dogs of War -
3 Understanding AI and Autonomy: Problematizing the Meaningful Human Control Argument against Killer Robots -
4 The Humanitarian Imperative for Minimally-Just AI in Weapons -
5 Programming Precision? Requiring Robust Transparency for AWS -
6 May Machines Take Lives to Save Lives? Human Perceptions of Autonomous Robots (with the Capacity to Kill) -
7 The Better Instincts of Humanity: Humanitarian Arguments in Defense of International Arms Control -
8 Toward a Positive Statement of Ethical Principles for Military AI -
9 Empirical Data on Attitudes Toward Autonomous Systems -
10 The Automation of Authority: Discrepancies with Jus Ad Bellum Principles -
11 Autonomous Weapons and the Future of Armed Conflict -
12 Autonomous Weapons and Reactive Attitudes -
13 Blind Brains and Moral Machines: Neuroscience and Autonomous Weapon Systems -
14 Enforced Transparency: A Solution to Autonomous Weapons as Potentially Uncontrollable Weapons Similar to Bioweapons -
15 Normative Epistemology for Lethal Autonomous Weapons Systems -
16 Proposing a Regional Normative Framework for Limiting the Potential for Unintentional or Escalatory Engagements with Increasingly Autonomous Weapon Systems -
17 The Human Role in Autonomous Weapon Design and Deployment - Index