Chief Justice Robots
Indexed incrossref
Abstract
Say an AI program someday passes a Turing test, because it can con-verse in a way indistinguishable from a human. And say that its develop-ers can then teach it to converse—and even present an extended persua-sive argument—in a way indistinguishable from the sort of human we call a “lawyer.” The program could thus become an AI brief-writer, ca-pable of regularly winning brief-writing competitions against human lawyers. Once that happens (if it ever happens), this Essay argues, the same technology can be used to create AI judges, judges that we should accept as no less reliable (and more cost-effective) than human judges. If the software can create persuasive opinions, capable of regularly winning…
Citation impact
12
total citations
- FWCI
- 0.00
- Percentile
- 99%
- References
- 0
Citations per year
Authors
1Topics & keywords
Keywords
- Economic Justice
- Political science
- Psychology
- Criminology
- Law and economics
- Business
- Law
- Sociology
No related works found for this paper.