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Updated: Sep 7, 2025

The Modular Design and Production of an Intelligent Robot Based on a Closed-Loop Control Strategy
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Can Robotic AI Systems Be Virtuous and Why Does This Matter?

Mihaela Constantinescu1, Roger Crisp2,3

  • 1Research Center in Applied Ethics (CCEA), Faculty of Philosophy, University of Bucharest, Bucharest, Romania.

International Journal of Social Robotics
|June 22, 2022
PubMed
Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

Social robots, particularly those using artificial intelligence (AI), cannot possess genuine ethical virtue. While they may simulate virtuous behavior, AI lacks the capacity for right feelings and intentions required by Aristotelian virtue ethics.

Keywords:
AAMAHRIIsolation robotsLoneliness robotsVirtueVirtue ethics

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Area of Science:

  • Philosophy of Technology
  • Artificial Intelligence Ethics
  • Human-Robot Interaction

Background:

  • The increasing integration of social robots into daily life, especially during periods of isolation, heightens ethical considerations in Human-Robot Interaction (HRI).
  • Concerns arise regarding the social, emotional, and moral implications of these AI-driven systems.
  • This study specifically examines the ethical virtue of social robots powered by deep learning artificial intelligence (AI).

Purpose of the Study:

  • To investigate whether social robots, particularly those utilizing deep learning AI, can be considered ethically virtuous.
  • To explore the concept of "virtuous robotic AI systems" from a virtue ethics perspective.
  • To determine if AI can genuinely embody ethical virtue or merely exhibit virtuous behavior.

Main Methods:

  • Analysis of Aristotelian virtue ethics, focusing on its three core requirements for virtue: right actions, right feelings, and the right way of acting.
  • Evaluation of current AI capabilities against these philosophical criteria for virtue.
  • Review of contemporary research in machine ethics, technology ethics, and HRI.

Main Results:

  • AI systems are incapable of genuinely possessing ethical virtue.
  • AI can only simulate virtuous behavior, failing to meet the criteria of having the right feelings or acting in the right way intrinsically.
  • The Aristotelian framework's requirements for virtue (right action, feeling, and manner) are currently unachievable for AI.

Conclusions:

  • Social robots powered by AI cannot be genuinely virtuous according to Aristotelian virtue ethics.
  • The development of Autonomous Artificial Moral Agents within a virtue ethics framework faces significant philosophical challenges.
  • Further research is needed to understand the ethical boundaries and potential of AI in HRI, particularly concerning moral agency.