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Intimacy, Bonding, and Sex Robots: Examining Empirical Results and Exploring Ethical Ramifications

Matthias Scheutz, Thomas Arnold

Year
2017
Citations
30

Abstract

Robots designed for sexual interaction present distinctive ethical challenges to received notions of physical intimacy, pleasure, social relationships, and social space. In this chapter, we build upon our recent survey on attitudes toward sex robots with the results from a second, expanded survey that broaches possible advantages and disadvantages of interacting with such robots, both individually and socially. We show that the first study’s results were replicated with respect to appropriate forms, contexts, and uses for sex robots; in addition, we find a systematic concern with how robots might risk harming human relationships. We conclude that ethical reflection on sex robots must include a wider consider-ation of the impact of social robots as a whole, with finer-grained examination of how intimacy and companionship define human relationships.

Keywords

RobotPleasurePsychologySocial psychologyEmpirical researchInterpersonal relationshipHuman–robot interactionComputer scienceArtificial intelligenceEpistemology

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