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Part front matter for Part II Ethical Issues beyond the Trolley Problem
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Published:September 2022
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The motivation for this volume is a frustration with the preoccupation of much of the philosophical community with the “trolleyology” approach to autonomous vehicles (AVs). While trolley problems are valuable for stress-testing our moral commitments, including those that arise in the process of developing and deploying AVs, we believe that this obsession has overshadowed the more quotidian issues with which AVs will confront society. This volume explores those issues, from concerns about how AVs will be integrated into human traffic and daily life, to concerns about equity and the distribution of risk, to nuanced concerns about programming, design, decision-making, and on and on.
In Part II, authors are given license to speculate about longer-term issues, while still remaining empirically and philosophically grounded, applying and extending lessons from emerging research. These chapters explore practical issues concerning the impacts of AVs on society: How do we responsibly speed the adoption of AVs, as we look to the future? How does the design of AVs modify the social implications of their introduction, and how should society prepare? What impact might AVs have on employment and what is society’s obligation to anticipate and manage the harms to displaced laborers? For the foreseeable future, AVs will share the road with human drivers: How should those situations be managed, and how should the resulting risks be distributed? Who should decide, and what mix of soft and hard law, that is, norms and regulations, should we seek? And what practical, concrete approach can we take to determining when the expected benefits of AVs are so compelling that we are obligated to integrate them into society at scale? While these situations are forward-looking, they are certainly not science fiction.
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