When Human Value Gets Rewritten

A series: When Systems Move Faster Than We Do

We are entering a moment in which human roles remain socially central while becoming operationally optional. As systems begin to think, respond, and coordinate continuously, they no longer depend on people in the ways our institutions, economies, and social norms still assume. This is the pressure that now moves into the human domain.

In earlier posts, we traced how intelligence outpaces human review, how environments begin to act automatically, and how institutions adapt by shifting from rule-based governance toward ongoing calibration. Once systems operate without waiting, the next question is not technical or institutional. It is human. What happens when participation persists, but reliance fades?

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A Moral Machine

This question underscores the need to proactively manage the path towards these possible futures – and the discussion surrounding ethics plays a critical role. Enter initiatives like Moral Machine from MIT. As described by their website, machine intelligence is supporting or entirely taking over ever more complex human activities at an ever increasing pace. The moral machine provides a platform for building a crowd-sourced picture of human opinion on how machines should make decisions when faced with moral dilemmas. Given the challenges of coding an ambiguous set of morals and ethics into machines, crowdsourcing makes great sense. So visit the Moral Machine platform and add your voice to the conversation.