Social Cognition and Artificial Agents

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Abstract

Standard notions in philosophy of mind have a tendency to characterize socio-cognitive abilities as if they were unique to sophisticated human beings. However, assuming that it is likely that we are soon going to share a large part of our social lives with various kinds of artificial agents, it is important to develop a conceptual framework providing notions that are able to account for various types of social agents. Recent minimal approaches to socio-cognitive abilities such as mindreading and commitment present a promising starting point from which one can expand the field of application not only to infants and non-human animals but also to artificial agents. Developing a minimal approach to the socio-cognitive ability of acting jointly, I present a foundation for future discussions about the question of how our conception of sociality can be expanded to artificial agents.

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APA

Strasser, A. (2018). Social Cognition and Artificial Agents. In Studies in Applied Philosophy, Epistemology and Rational Ethics (Vol. 44, pp. 106–114). Springer International Publishing. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-96448-5_12

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