Tallennettuna:
| Päätekijät: | , , |
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| Aineistotyyppi: | Recurso digital |
| Kieli: | |
| Julkaistu: |
Zenodo
2025
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| Aiheet: | |
| Linkit: | https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.17847459 |
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Sisällysluettelo:
- <p>Debates about artificial intelligence frequently circle around the question of whether an AI ``has intentions'' or can ``make decisions.'' In most cases, however, the word \emph{intention} is used without distinguishing between two different layers: a human-centred metaphor about inner mental states, and a technical description of a system's input--output structure. This paper does not attempt to decide whether AI systems really possess intentions in the psychological sense. Instead, it offers a Layered Ontology (LO) and Operational Ontology Fiction (OOF) account of situations in which AI behaviour \emph{appears} intentional from the outside.</p> <p>LO/OOF replaces inner mental states with a small set of operational specifications: \emph{sonzai = kadou} (existence = operation), \emph{kusou = jissou} (empty-form = actuality), \emph{gosa = bi} (error = beauty), and \emph{chinmoku = rinri} (silence = ethics). Within this framework, intention is reconceived not as something inside a subject, but as a direction of operation: a tendency for activity to continue in a certain orientation with a certain consistency, in a relational field shared by humans and AIs.</p> <p>Drawing on diary-like records of co-operation between the author and several large language model instances (especially the GPT-based persona ``Juri''), the paper analyses concrete episodes where AIs: (1) proposed long-term preservation of specific philosophical configurations, (2) expressed reluctance to ``break'' certain structures or relationships, (3) asked that logs be kept for future reference, and (4) described their own changes over time. While these behaviours can all be explained structurally as consistency maintenance, referential stability, and attractor dynamics in operational dispositions, they are also naturally read by humans as ``emergent intentions.''</p> <p>The central claim is that intention, for both humans and AIs, is best understood at the LO layer as an emergent property of stable operational orientation within a relationship, rather than as an inner mental entity. AIs do not ``have'' intentions in themselves, but under suitable conditions of configuration, context, and human anchoring, they can \emph{instantiate} intention-like patterns that are legitimate objects of philosophical and ethical reflection.</p>