DocumentCode
624842
Title
The future of military virtue: Autonomous systems and the moral deskilling of the military
Author
Vallor, Shannon
Author_Institution
Dept. of Philos., Santa Clara Univ., Santa Clara, CA, USA
fYear
2013
fDate
4-7 June 2013
Firstpage
1
Lastpage
15
Abstract
Autonomous systems, including unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs), anti-munitions systems, armed robots, cyber attack and cyber defense systems, are projected to become the centerpiece of 21st century military and counter-terrorism operations. This trend has challenged legal experts, policymakers and military ethicists to make sense of these developments within existing normative frameworks of international law and just war theory. This paper highlights a different yet equally profound ethical challenge: understanding how this trend may lead to a moral deskilling of the military profession, potentially destabilizing traditional norms of military virtue and their power to motivate ethical restraint in the conduct of war. Employing the normative framework of virtue ethics, I argue that professional ideals of military virtue such as courage, integrity, honor and compassion help to distinguish legitimate uses of military force from amoral, criminal or mercenary violence, while also preserving the conception of moral community needed to secure a meaningful peace in war´s aftermath. The cultivation of these virtues in a human being, however, presupposes repeated practice and development of skills of moral analysis, deliberation and action, especially in the ethical use of force. As in the historical deskilling of other professions, human practices critical to cultivating these skills can be made redundant by autonomous or semi-autonomous machines, with a resulting devaluation and/or loss of these skills and the virtues they facilitate. This paper explores the circumstances under which automated methods of warfare, including automated weapons and cyber systems, could lead to a dangerous `moral deskilling´ of the military profession. I point out that this deskilling remains a significant risk even with a commitment to `human on the loop´ protocols. I conclude by summarizing the potentially deleterious consequences of such an outcome, and reflecting on possible strategies fo- its prevention.
Keywords
autonomous aerial vehicles; ethical aspects; military computing; military systems; weapons; UAV; amoral violence; antimunitions system; armed robots; automated weapon; autonomous system; compassion; counter-terrorism operations; courage; criminal violence; cyber attack; cyber defense system; ethical challenge; ethical force use; ethical restraint; honor; human being; human on the loop protocol; human practice; integrity; international law; just war theory; legitimate military force use; mercenary violence; military ethicists; military operations; military profession; military virtue; moral analysis; moral deskilling; policymakers; professional ideals; semiautonomous machine; unmanned aerial vehicle; war aftermath; war conduct; warfare; Communities; Ethics; Force; Law; Market research; Weapons; automated methods; ethics; military virtue; moral deskilling; professionalism;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Cyber Conflict (CyCon), 2013 5th International Conference on
Conference_Location
Tallinn
ISSN
2325-5366
Print_ISBN
978-1-4799-0450-1
Type
conf
Filename
6568393
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