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Main Authors: Roberts, Theodore, Zarrin, Bahram
Format: Preprint
Published: 2025
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Online Access:https://arxiv.org/abs/2601.06062
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author Roberts, Theodore
Zarrin, Bahram
author_facet Roberts, Theodore
Zarrin, Bahram
contents Agentic artificial intelligence systems are autonomous technologies capable of pursuing complex goals with minimal human oversight and are rapidly emerging as the next frontier in AI. While these systems promise major gains in productivity, they also raise new ethical challenges. Prior research has examined how different populations prioritize Responsible AI values, yet little is known about how practitioners actually reason through the trade-offs inherent in designing these autonomous systems. This paper investigates the ethical reasoning of AI practitioners through qualitative interviews centered on structured dilemmas in agentic AI deployment. We find that the responses of practitioners do not merely reflect value preferences but rather align with three distinct reasoning frameworks. First is a Customer-Centric framework where choices are justified by business interests, legality, and user autonomy. Second is a Design-Centric framework emphasizing technical safeguards and system constraints. Third is an Ethics-Centric framework prioritizing social good and moral responsibility beyond compliance. We argue that these frameworks offer distinct and necessary insights for navigating ethical trade-offs. Consequently, providers of agentic AI must look beyond general principles and actively manage how these diverse reasoning frameworks are represented in their decision-making processes to ensure robust ethical outcomes.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2601_06062
institution arXiv
publishDate 2025
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle From Values to Frameworks: A Qualitative Study of Ethical Reasoning in Agentic AI Practitioners
Roberts, Theodore
Zarrin, Bahram
Computers and Society
Artificial Intelligence
Human-Computer Interaction
K.4.1; H.5
Agentic artificial intelligence systems are autonomous technologies capable of pursuing complex goals with minimal human oversight and are rapidly emerging as the next frontier in AI. While these systems promise major gains in productivity, they also raise new ethical challenges. Prior research has examined how different populations prioritize Responsible AI values, yet little is known about how practitioners actually reason through the trade-offs inherent in designing these autonomous systems. This paper investigates the ethical reasoning of AI practitioners through qualitative interviews centered on structured dilemmas in agentic AI deployment. We find that the responses of practitioners do not merely reflect value preferences but rather align with three distinct reasoning frameworks. First is a Customer-Centric framework where choices are justified by business interests, legality, and user autonomy. Second is a Design-Centric framework emphasizing technical safeguards and system constraints. Third is an Ethics-Centric framework prioritizing social good and moral responsibility beyond compliance. We argue that these frameworks offer distinct and necessary insights for navigating ethical trade-offs. Consequently, providers of agentic AI must look beyond general principles and actively manage how these diverse reasoning frameworks are represented in their decision-making processes to ensure robust ethical outcomes.
title From Values to Frameworks: A Qualitative Study of Ethical Reasoning in Agentic AI Practitioners
topic Computers and Society
Artificial Intelligence
Human-Computer Interaction
K.4.1; H.5
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2601.06062