2-4 September 2019
School of Tourism and Hospitality
Africa/Johannesburg timezone

Making Afro-ethics Computational

3 Sep 2019, 09:00
15m
School of Tourism and Hospitality

School of Tourism and Hospitality

University of Johannesburg Bunting Road Campus Auckland Park Johannesburg South Africa
Speaker Plenary Session I

Speaker

Mr Samuel Segun (University of Johannesburg)

Description

Arguably, research in computational ethics and particularly any attempt at composing an ethical scheme for machines or autonomous intelligent systems will require three steps. First, identifying and adopting an ethical system, which will be compatible with a top-down, bottom-up or hybrid approach to computation. Second, schematizing this ethic in analytic form and third, developing appropriate syntax and a utility function for the development of an ethical algorithm. In this talk, I consider the underexplored ethical system common to peoples of sub-Saharan Africa, which I have christened ‘Afro-ethics’. I show in this talk that the nature of Afro-ethics, unlike deontological or consequential ethics, is unstructured and makes the problem of tractability more evident. For lack of space and time, I address the first two steps of creating an ethically computational framework for artificial intelligent systems. These are identifying the primary features of Afro-ethics and schematizing these in analytic form.

Primary author

Mr Samuel Segun (University of Johannesburg)

Presentation Materials

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