Delegating Responsibilities to Intelligent Autonomous Systems: Challenges and Benefits
Journal article, 2025

As AI systems increasingly operate with autonomy and adaptability, the traditional boundaries of moral responsibility in techno-social systems are being challenged. This paper explores the evolving discourse on the delegation of responsibilities to intelligent autonomous agents and the ethical implications of such practices. Synthesizing recent developments in AI ethics, including concepts of distributed responsibility and ethical AI by design, the paper proposes a functionalist perspective as a framework. This perspective views moral responsibility not as an individual trait but as a role within a socio-technical system, distributed among human and artificial agents. As an example of “AI ethical by design,” we present Basti and Vitiello’s implementation. They suggest that AI can act as artificial moral agents by learning ethical guidelines and using Deontic Higher-Order Logic to assess decisions ethically. Motivated by the possible speed and scale beyond human supervision and ethical implications, the paper argues for “AI ethical by design,” while acknowledging the distributed, shared, and dynamic nature of responsibility. This functionalist approach offers a practical framework for navigating the complexities of AI ethics in a rapidly evolving technological landscape.

Responsibility

AI

AI ecologies

Machine ethics

Socio-technlological systems

Autonomous intelligent systems

Author

Gordana Dodig Crnkovic

University of Gothenburg

Chalmers, Computer Science and Engineering (Chalmers), Interaction Design and Software Engineering

Mälardalens högskola

Gianfranco Basti

Pontifical Lateran University

Tobias Holstein

Mälardalens högskola

Journal of bioethical inquiry.

1176-7529 (ISSN)

107308

Subject Categories (SSIF 2025)

Medical Ethics

Computer Vision and learning System

Philosophy

Ethics

DOI

10.1007/s11673-025-10428-5

PubMed

40392473

More information

Latest update

5/27/2025