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David Danks on causality, human-technology interaction, and ethics of autonomous systems
Season 1 · Episode 10

David Danks on causality, human-technology interaction, and ethics of autonomous systems

David Danks is a professor of philosophy and psychology and head of the department of philosophy at Carnegie Mellon University. The post David Danks on causality, human-technology interaction, and ethics of autonomous systems appeared first on Luminary.

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December 30, 20191h 22m

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Show Notes

David Danks is a professor of philosophy and psychology and head of the department of philosophy at Carnegie Mellon University. His research lies at the intersection of philosophy, cognitive science, and machine learning, with a recent focus on the ethics of and policy for autonomous systems such as self-driving vehicles and autonomous warfare. David is the author of Unifying the Mind: Cognitive Representations as Graphical Models, as well as, Building Theories: Heuristics and Hypotheses in Science.

In our conversation with David, we cover: his journey into philosophy, learning models, causality, the impact of information overload on human cognition, and the role of trust in human-technology adoption cycles. David also shares his views on ethics and policy considerations for autonomous systems, and how we might think about agency and sovereignty for artificial intelligence-based systems.

About and from Prof. David Danks:

Research:

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Luminary Podcast:

Music:

The post David Danks on causality, human-technology interaction, and ethics of autonomous systems appeared first on Luminary.fm.

Topics

internetmodern computingsoftware historythe dream machine