Seth will be heading to Oxford for a visiting fellowship for Hilary term 2023. He’ll be based in the institute for ethics in AI and the Faculty of Philosophy, from January through mid-March.
Read MoreSeth's heading to the US in April! As well as the Kamm lecture at Harvard, he'll be giving talks at CMU, Emory, and Princeton. More details to follow.
Read MoreIn March, Seth is teaching into the University of Oxford's Masters program in practical ethics, as well as delivering a lecture into the ethics module of the Next Generation AI Symposium. He will also be presenting at the Schwarz Reisman Institute's weekly seminar.
Read MoreIn February Seth lectured into the University of Memphis, Tennessee, AI Ethics course, run by David Gray, and presented a paper on Legitimacy, Authority, and the Political Value of Explanations to the Rutgers Philosophy Colloquium.
Read MoreSeth Lazar's chapter on 'Power and AI: Nature and Justification' is forthcoming in the Oxford Handbook of AI Governance.
Read MoreSeth Lazar and Christian Barry's co-authored paper, Supererogation and Optimisation, has been accepted for publication by the Australasian Journal of Philosophy. The paper explores principles that might underpin either the demand for altruistic efficiency, or the denial of any such demand.
Read MoreSean Donahue has accepted an offer to join MINT, funded by the ARC Future Fellowship project ‘Automatic Authorities: Charting a Course for Legitimate AI’
Read MoreBen Robinson and Antonio Esposito win scholarships for their work on Moral Skill and Ethics for AI respectively.
Read MoreACM FAccT 2022, registration opening soon
Read MoreSeth Lazar has been made a Distinguished Research Fellow of the University of Oxford's Institute for Ethics in AI, and the Faculty of Philosophy. This honorary position is in recognition of the existing deep collaboration between Seth and the Oxford Institute, including through the PAIS consortium.
Read MoreClaire Benn and Seth Lazar ask what is wrong with online behavioural advertising and recommender systems, in this paper published in the Canadian Journal of Philosophy.
Read MoreWorld Economic Forum's Quantum Computing Governance Principles programme brings together a global multi-stakeholder community of experts from across public sector, private sector, academia and civil society to formulate principles and create a broader ethical framework for responsible and purpose-driven design and adoption of quantum computing technologies to drive positive outcomes for society.
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