Thursday, August 23, 2018
As intelligent machines begin more generally outperforming human experts, why should humans remain ‘in the loop’ of decision-making? One common answer focuses on outcomes: relying on intuition and experience, humans are capable of identifying interpretive errors — sometimes disastrous errors — that elude machines. Though plausible today, this argument will wear thin as technology evolves. Here, we seek out sturdier ground: a defense of human judgment that focuses on the normative integrity of decision-making. Specifically, we propose an account of democratic equality as ‘role-reversibility.’ In a democracy, those tasked with making decisions should be susceptible, reciprocally, to the impact of decisions; there ought to be a meaningful sense in which the participants’ roles in the decisional process could always be swapped. Role-reversibility infuses the act of judgment with a ‘there but for the grace of god’ dynamic and, in doing so, casts judgment as the result of self-rule. After defending role-reversibility in concept, we show how it bears out in the paradigm case of criminal jury trials.
Although it was not the historical impetus behind the jury trial — at least, not in any strong sense — we argue that role-reversibility explains some of the institution’s core features and stands among the best reasons for its preservation. Finally, for the sci-fi enthusiasts among us, role-reversibility offers a prescription as to when the legal system will be ready for robo-jurors and robo-judges: when it incorporates robo-defendants.
http://lawprofessors.typepad.com/crimprof_blog/2018/08/brennan-marquez-henderson-on-ai-decisionmakers.html
Brennan-Marquez & Henderson on AI Decisionmakers curated from CrimProf Blog
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