We warmly welcome you to a talk organized in partnership with the Centre for Environmental and Technology Ethics -- Prague:
AI and Extinction through a Welfarist Lens: A New Approach
Date: Thursday December 14, 15:00
Place: AKC Husova 4a, Prague 1
Abstract: From a traditional welfarist perspective, the special harm of extinction is hard to explain. Yes, there are instrumental, anthropocentric reasons to value species, but many share the intuition that extinction has additional moral significance, beyond whatever value a species might have to human beings. This talk will explore a version of welfarism that values, in a foundational way, the diversity of subjective experiences. Under this view, which I call "heteric welfarism," extinction is bad (other things being equal) when it reduces the diversity of experiences. A heteric welfarist would also endorse (other things being equal) the creation of new forms of experience, for example through advanced AI. Heteric welfarism can give us traction of important moral questions of the Anthropocene, but it also raises some tricky questions as well.
Michael A. Livermore is a legal academic from the University of Virginia School of Law whose research focuses on regulatory review, environmental law, cost-benefit analysis, and the application of data science techniques to legal texts.