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Entry

Navigating the Ethics of Artificial Intelligence

Science, Technology, and Society (STS) Program, Department of Philosophy and Religious Studies, College of Humanities and Social Sciences, North Carolina State University, Raleigh, NC 27695, USA
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Encyclopedia 2025, 5(4), 201; https://doi.org/10.3390/encyclopedia5040201
Submission received: 17 October 2025 / Revised: 10 November 2025 / Accepted: 18 November 2025 / Published: 26 November 2025
(This article belongs to the Section Social Sciences)

Definition

This entry delineates artificial intelligence (AI) ethics and the field’s core ethical challenges, surveys the principal normative frameworks in the literature, and offers a historical analysis that traces and explains the shift from ethical monism to ethical pluralism. In particular, it (i) situates the field within the trajectory of AI’s technical development, (ii) organizes the field’s rationale around challenges regarding alignment, opacity, human oversight, bias and noise, accountability, and questions of agency and patiency, and (iii) compares leading theoretical approaches to address these challenges. We show that AI’s development has brought escalating ethical challenges along with a maturation of frameworks proposed to address them. We map an arc from early monisms (e.g., deontology, consequentialism) to a variety of pluralist ethical frameworks (e.g., pluralistic deontology, augmented utilitarianism, moral foundation theory, and the agent-deed-consequence model) alongside pluralist governance regimes (e.g., principles from the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE), the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO), and the Asilomar AI principles). We find that pluralism is both normatively and operationally compelling: it mirrors the multidimensional problem space of AI ethics, guards against failures (e.g., reward hacking, emergency exceptions), supports legitimacy across diverse sociotechnical contexts, and coheres with extant principles of AI engineering and governance. Although pluralist models vary in structure and exhibit distinct limitations, when applied with due methodological care, each can furnish a valuable foundation for AI ethics.
Keywords: artificial intelligence; AI ethics; value alignment; black-box problem; human-in-the-loop; ethical pluralism; policy guidelines artificial intelligence; AI ethics; value alignment; black-box problem; human-in-the-loop; ethical pluralism; policy guidelines

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MDPI and ACS Style

Harris, J.; Dubljević, V. Navigating the Ethics of Artificial Intelligence. Encyclopedia 2025, 5, 201. https://doi.org/10.3390/encyclopedia5040201

AMA Style

Harris J, Dubljević V. Navigating the Ethics of Artificial Intelligence. Encyclopedia. 2025; 5(4):201. https://doi.org/10.3390/encyclopedia5040201

Chicago/Turabian Style

Harris, Jack, and Veljko Dubljević. 2025. "Navigating the Ethics of Artificial Intelligence" Encyclopedia 5, no. 4: 201. https://doi.org/10.3390/encyclopedia5040201

APA Style

Harris, J., & Dubljević, V. (2025). Navigating the Ethics of Artificial Intelligence. Encyclopedia, 5(4), 201. https://doi.org/10.3390/encyclopedia5040201

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