Watch: Confucian alternative beats giving robots rights

As robots assume more roles in the world, a new analysis reviewed research on robot rights, concluding that granting rights to robots is a bad idea.

Philosophers and legal scholars have explored significant aspects of the moral and legal status of robots, with some advocating for giving robots rights.

The analysis, published in Communications of the ACM, looks to Confucianism to offer an alternative.

“People are worried about the risks of granting rights to robots,” notes Tae Wan Kim, associate professor of business ethics at Carnegie Mellon University’s Tepper School of Business, who conducted the analysis. “Granting rights is not the only way to address the moral status of robots: Envisioning robots as rites bearers—not a rights bearers—could work better.”

Various non-natural entities—such as corporations—are considered people and even assume some Constitutional rights. In addition, humans are not the only species with moral and legal status; in most developed societies, moral and legal considerations preclude researchers from gratuitously using animals for lab experiments.

Although many believe that respecting robots should lead to granting them rights, Kim argues for a different approach. Confucianism, an ancient Chinese belief system, focuses on the social value of achieving harmony; individuals are made distinctively human by their ability to conceive of interests not purely in terms of personal self-interest, but in terms that include a relational and a communal self. This, in turn, requires a unique perspective on rites, with people enhancing themselves morally by participating in proper rituals.

When considering robots, Kim suggests that the Confucian alternative of assigning rites—or what he calls role obligations—to robots is more appropriate than giving robots rights. The concept of rights is often adversarial and competitive, and potential conflict between humans and robots is concerning.

“Assigning role obligations to robots encourages teamwork, which triggers an understanding that fulfilling those obligations should be done harmoniously,” explains Kim.

“Artificial intelligence (AI) imitates human intelligence, so for robots to develop as rites bearers, they must be powered by a type of AI that can imitate humans’ capacity to recognize and execute team activities—and a machine can learn that ability in various ways.”

Kim acknowledges that some will question why robots should be treated respectfully in the first place.

“To the extent that we make robots in our image, if we don’t treat them well, as entities capable of participating in rites, we degrade ourselves,” he suggests.

Source: Carnegie Mellon University

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Chicago suffers 34 shot, 8 killed as bloody Memorial Day weekend nears end

Chicago has suffered 34 shootings so far in Memorial Day weekend, with eight of them resulting in deaths, according to the Chicago Police Department.

As of Sunday, several of those injured remained in critical condition in hospitals across the city. The carnage is already well above what was seen the previous weekend.

The oldest victim of the weekend’s violence is 55, while the youngest is just 14. The young girl suffered a bullet graze wound to her right arm while standing on the sidewalk with group of people at roughly 10 p.m. Saturday, according to ABC7 Chicago.

Police treated the girl at the scene, but she declined a trip to the hospital.

SUBURBAN CHICAGO MAN FATALLY SHOT BY POLICE OFFICER WHO WAS CALLED TO ASSIST PARAMEDICS

Chicago Police cruiser

The Chicago Police Department has reported at least 34 injuries from shootings so far this Memorial Day weekend, with at least eight of the shootings being fatal. Several other victims remain in critical condition. (Beata Zawrzel/NurPhoto via Getty Images)

MAN WHO SHOT SUBURBAN CHICAGO OFFICER HIT WITH ADDITIONAL ARMED ROBBERY CHARGE

The youngest victim of a fatal shooting so far was a 20-year-old man killed Sunday morning. Police said two men approached the unidentified male and at least one of them opened fire, striking him in the head and legs.

No one is in custody in relation to the incident.

Chicago Police Shooting after carjacking

Chicago police officers are scrambling to respond to crimes across the city as violence ramps up over the extended Memorial Day weekend. (FOX32 Chicago WFLD)

Another trio of men were shot while standing on the sidewalk at roughly 12:50 a.m. Sunday. Shots were fired from unknown attackers, wounding all three men. One of them, 22, was taken to the hospital in good condition with a gunshot wound to the leg. Another man, 32, was also reported in good condition with a gunshot wound to the back.

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The third man, of unknown age, was reported in serious condition, however, and was taken to Advocate Illinois Masonic Medical Center with gunshot wounds to the back and chest.

No one is in custody in relation to the incident.

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Premier League: Everton avoids relegation on dramatic final day as Leicester City and Leeds United drop down to Championship



CNN
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Everton avoided relegation from the Premier League by the skin of its teeth on Sunday, earning a hard-fought 1-0 win over Bournemouth at a raucous Goodison Park.

The outlook was bleak for Everton for quite some time after Harvey Barnes gave Leicester City a first-half lead against West Ham, vaulting the Foxes above Everton and out of the relegation zone.

However, Abdoulaye Doucoure’s crisp volley just before the hour mark clinched three of the most important points in Everton’s history to maintain its Premier League status and condemn Leicester to the Championship, despite a 2-1 win over the Hammers.

Goalkeeper Jordan Pickford pulled off a huge save late in the game to keep the Toffees’ lead intact, before a bellowing roar from the fans almost blew the roof off Goodison Park when the referee blew the whistle for full time.

Leeds United will join Leicester in England’s second tier after losing 4-1 at home to Tottenham Hotspur, with Southampon’s relegation already confirmed weeks ago.

Sam Allardyce was unable to save Leeds United from relegation.

Defender Conor Coady said the overriding emotion was “relief” after Everton avoided relegation from the Premier League for the first time, but admitted the club needs to avoid these relegation battles “becoming a bit of a thing.”

“It was last season and now this season,” he told Sky Sports after the match. “This is where we need to improve and we need to reset, but it’s relief – I’ll be honest, it’s been the hardest season of my life, of my career.

“It’s something you don’t want to be part of, this giant of a football club and going down, you don’t want to be part of that and we’ve reiterated that all season. We’re not, but what we’ve got to do now is not make this a common theme because that’s now the last two seasons.

“This club has to rise and it has to get better now.”

It’s going to take some serious work and investment over the English summer if Everton is to win back the fans.

Throughout the season, supporters have continued their vociferous backing of the team, despite its consistently poor performances, but have now regularly been voicing their displeasure with the club’s board.

Many point to a lack of direction from ownership and some wayward investment in the playing squad as the root cause of a second successive relegation battle, with protests against the club’s board taking place before every game at Goodison Park for the last couple of months.

Leicester City was relegated despite a win over West Ham.

The relationship between supporters and Everton chairman Bill Kenwright appears beyond repair as fans have continually called for changes at the boardroom level this season.

The board of directors were even told to not attend Everton’s home game against Southampton in Janaury due to a “real and credible threat to their safety and security,” the club said at the time.

Club majority shareholder Farhad Moshiri has spent hundreds of millions of pounds since purchasing a stake in the club in 2016, but that outlay has yielded little to no success.

At least for tonight, those problems will pale in comparison to Leicester, Leeds and Southampton’s woes as the trio now face at least one season in the Championship.

England’s second tier is a notoriously difficult league to earn promotion from, however, so returning to the Premier League is by no means certain.

With some talented players and a healthy transfer budget from the inevitable sales of its stars, Leicester is perhaps best placed of the three relegated teams to earn promotion back at the first time of asking, while Leeds and Southampton struggle to find a direction and an identity.

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