= 2,499), we investigated whether created agents are more likely to be seen as owned if they cause harm. This prediction was suggested by the hypothesis that ownership is sometimes used to express moral responsibility, though it runs against the tendency for harm to introduce restrictions on ownership. In all experiments, participants more often judged that created agents belonged to their inventors when they caused harm than when they did good. The final experiment then showed that these judgments do not strongly align with assessments of rights over created agents. Overall, the findings suggest that harmfulness changes the moral standing of created agents in a novel way, increasing perceptions of them as property.
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Emily E. Stonehouse
Ori Friedman
Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin
University of Waterloo
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Stonehouse et al. (Sun,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/69f1a033edf4b46824806d4f — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1177/01461672261439251
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