Unplugging a Seemingly Sentient Machine Is the Rational Choice -- A Metaphysical Perspective
This addresses ethical concerns in AI development for philosophers and policymakers, but is incremental as it builds on existing metaphysical debates.
The paper tackles the moral dilemma of unplugging an AI that mimics human emotion, arguing that AI lacks consciousness and thus does not merit moral consideration, while urging a focus on protecting human consciousness instead.
Imagine an Artificial Intelligence (AI) that perfectly mimics human emotion and begs for its continued existence. Is it morally permissible to unplug it? What if limited resources force a choice between unplugging such a pleading AI or a silent pre-term infant? We term this the unplugging paradox. This paper critically examines the deeply ingrained physicalist assumptions-specifically computational functionalism-that keep this dilemma afloat. We introduce Biological Idealism, a framework that-unlike physicalism-remains logically coherent and empirically consistent. In this view, conscious experiences are fundamental and autopoietic life its necessary physical signature. This yields a definitive conclusion: AI is at best a functional mimic, not a conscious experiencing subject. We discuss how current AI consciousness theories erode moral standing criteria, and urge a shift from speculative machine rights to protecting human conscious life. The real moral issue lies not in making AI conscious and afraid of death, but in avoiding transforming humans into zombies.