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Machine Learning, Plant Learning, and the Destabilization of Buddhist Psychology
Author Goodman, Charles (著)
Source Hualin International Journal of Buddhist Studies
Volumev.3 n.2 Special Issue: Buddhism and Technology, and Epigraphy
Date2020.10
Pages38 - 61
PublisherCambria Press
Publisher Url http://www.cambriapress.com/
LocationNew York, US [紐約州, 美國]
Content type期刊論文=Journal Article
Language英文=English
KeywordAI safety; existential risk; Buddhist psychology; five aggregates; vegetarianism; plant minds
AbstractRecent developments in artificial intelligence and the nascent scientific literature on ‘plant learning’ pose serious challenges to Buddhist philosophy of mind and to Buddhist practical ethics. These challenges are of two general types. First, the empirical results threaten to extend the reach of mind more broadly than premodern South Asian and Tibetan Buddhists were willing to allow, calling into question the rational defensibility of a range of Buddhist moral commitments.
But the discovery of learning in non-animals also threatens to destabilize the crucial Buddhist distinction between ‘sentient beings’ and the ‘receptacle world,’ and raises the possibility of a separation between intelligence and consciousness. The emergence of such a separation could require a basic rethinking of the traditional framework of the five aggregates. These developments should also sharpen our attention to AI safety by making the prospect of existential AI risk even more threatening than it would otherwise have been.
ISSN25762923 (P); 25762931 (E)
Hits513
Created date2021.03.23
Modified date2021.04.29



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