On Balance, the Potential Benefits of Autonomous Vehicles outweigh the Potential Harms
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For my first instigation on this site, I thought I would create a debate in the CARS category seeing how there are 0 debates in that category now, like that class nobody signs up for.
I propose that the potential benefits of autonomous vehicles are manifest, including improvements in human safety, improvements in transportation costs following improvements in transportation efficiency, and an opportunity for meaningful mitigation of environmental costs in mass transportation.
1st round is reserved for flattery (not required) and acceptance only.
2nd round Pro argues benefits Con argues costs (Con is free to address Pro's argument).
3rd round is for counterarguments, questions, and requests for clarification.
4th round is for replies and answers. No new questions. No new arguments.
5th round is for conclusions and voter appeals.
Acceptance = agreement that any forfeit = automatic loss/end debate
I'm requesting friendly and sincere participation: acceptance of this debate acknowledges that failing on either count is subject to consideration under conduct in voting.
I propose that the potential benefits of autonomous vehicles are manifest, including improvements in human safety, improvements in transportation costs following improvements in transportation efficiency, and an opportunity for meaningful mitigation of environmental costs in mass transportation.
I should begin by noting that there is a fair amount of confusion around the term autonomous.
I. Safety
A. Worldwide, roughly 1.25 million people died in traffic in 2015: a daily average of more than 3,400 people and the leading cause of death for people aged 15-29. Up to 50 million people incurred non-fatal injuries [1] More than 35,000 of those deaths were in the US, where the Dept. of Transportation attributes 94% of those fatalities to human error. [2] The NHTSA estimated the total economic and societal damage caused by car accidents in the US to be $871billion in 2010. [3]
B. Because AV tech promises much improved perception and response times without blind spots and programmed, effective avoidance measures, House Energy and Commerce Committee Chairman Frank Pallone Jr. estimates that self-driving cars could reduce traffic accidents by up to 90% in the coming decades: a technological advance with the potential to save millions of lives, tens of millions of injuries and trillions of dollars.[4]
II. Traffic Jams
A. The ASCE reports that in 2014, Americans spent 6.9 billion hours delayed in traffic: 42 hours per driver wasting 3.1 billion gallons of fuel and $160 billion in productivity. [5]
1. Platoons of inter-networked cars formed into close traveling trains of vehicles, all receiving simultaneous inputs might eliminate most of the present wasteful acceleration and deceleration on expressways.
IV. Fossil Fuels
A. See III.C. above
VI. Parking Capacity
VII. People Capacity
B. Autonomous vehicles could make on-demand transportation available to millions who can’t drive themselves for many reasons: the disabled, the young, and particularly senior citizens who lose their ability to drive. About 100 million Americans presently don’t have a driver’s license, suggesting a large market of people for whom AV tech could mean significant improvements in mobility and consequently, quality of life. [15]
“when goods arrive at a high-capacity freight station or port, they must then be transported to their final destination. This last leg of the supply chain is often less efficient, comprising up to 28% of the total cost to move goods. This has become known as the "last mile problem. The last mile problem can also include the challenge of making deliveries in urban areas. Deliveries to retail stores, restaurants, and other merchants in a central business district often contribute to congestion and safety problems.” [16]
[1] https://www.who.int/violence_injury_prevention/road_safety_status/2015/en/
[2] https://www.transportation.gov/connections/autonomous-vehicles-driving-us-toward-zero-death-future
[3] https://www.pbs.org/newshour/nation/motor-vehicle-crashes-u-s-cost-871-billion-year-federal-study-finds[4] https://docs.house.gov/meetings/IF/IF17/20161115/105416/HHRG-114-IF17-20161115-SD002.pdf
[6] https://extramile.thehartford.com/auto/traffic-jams-car-crashes/
[7] https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2017/05/170510095703.htm
[8] https://www.bcg.com/publications/2015/automotive-revolution-versus-regulation-make-break-questions-autonomous-vehicles.aspx
[9] https://www.rand.org/pubs/research_reports/RR443-2.html
[10] www.qi2.com/images/pdfs/EAULV_reprint.pdf
[12] https://www.ssti.us/2016/12/automated-vehicles-will-bring-big-highway-capacity-increases/
[13] https://www-03.ibm.com/press/us/en/pressrelease/35515.wss
[14] https://www.motherjones.com/environment/2016/01/future-parking-self-driving-cars/
[15] https://www.statista.com/statistics/198029/total-number-of-us-licensed-drivers-by-state/
[17] cityobservatory.org/how-much-will-autonomous-vehicles-cost/
- The side which is less likely to doom and/or stunt humanity and its progress, is overall the one with less potential costs.
- The side which is more likely to keep humanity at its peak, in both capacity and potential use of that capacity, ends up being the one with the most potential benefits.
- If 1 and 2 both have the same victor in the comparison, that side definitely wins the debate.
- If 1 and 2 have different results, then 1 needs to be weight against 2 by observing if the degree to which one is further than the other from dooming humanity is as much closer than the other to keeping humanity at its peak, including the using of the capacity in this analysis. If it seems 1 outweighs 2, then the risk outweighs the reward but if 2 outweighs 1, it is a higher risk, higher reward system that is to be opted for (whether it's 1 or 2).
...the distance travelled is hardly lessened and the fuel would be the same...
...if Pro combats this saying that the system would be able to become entirely cable-based...
...the abuse of civil liberties that would occur if you made the system automation-mandatory....
This means that the scope of morality and legality should be humanity almost entirely, not animals or some obscure thing that is outer-space related etc...
the system Pro is raising most likely requires you to be fully alert.... This is going to dull the brains of humanity.
It's not a fallacious slipper-slope type of argument to suggest that once humanity surrenders transport to automation, it will begin...surrendering everything, even the exploration of new concepts and... old theories, in science and politics.
and everything, literally everything that ever matters will become robot-handled. We will completely destroy ourselves if ever there was an invasion from outer space Robots would happily surrender to the invaders (or new evolved species) and screw over humanity.... This is not at all unrealistic to assume.
You cannot possibly suggest that we could program self-thinking, self-inventing robots and make them dumb enough to... 'favour humans
I will not bring sources to prove this unless Pro challenges it with sources or demands them from me.
I'll prove that it's undeniably the inevitable outcome ... to love machines and hate doing any work.
Who do you blame when something in the system goes wrong?
...selfish government and selfish CEOs of corporartions... obviously going to make it so that the system isn't fully automated
...forcing you to give up your ability to drive...
Since the inevitable outcome will be that there's never ever full automation ...
Game: like games in popular understanding, it can be any setting where players take actions and its outcome will depend on them.Player: a strategic decision-maker within a game.Strategy: a complete plan of actions a player will take, given the set of circumstances that might arise within the game.Payoff: the gain a player receives from arriving at a particular outcome of a game.Equilibrium: the point in a game where both players have made their decisions and an outcome is reached.Nash equilibrium: an equilibrium in which no player can gain by changing their own strategy if the strategies of the other players remain unchanged.Dominant strategy: occurs when one strategy is better than another strategy for one player, no matter how that player’s opponents may play.Agent: equivalent to a player.Reward: equivalent to a payoff.State: all the information necessary to describe the situation an agent is in.Action: equivalent of a move in a game.Policy: similar to a strategy, it defines the action an agent will make when in particular statesEnvironment: everything the agent interacts with during learning.
Game theory is the science of strategy. It attempts to determine mathematically and logically the actions that “players” should take to secure the best outcomes for themselves in a wide array of “games.” The games it studies range from chess to child rearing and from tennis to takeovers. But the games all share the common feature of interdependence. That is, the outcome for each participant depends on the choices (strategies) of all. In so-called zero-sum games the interests of the players conflict totally, so that one person’s gain always is another’s loss. More typical are games with the potential for either mutual gain (positive sum) or mutual harm (negative sum), as well as some conflict.
nobody is proposing mandatory conversion.
nobody is forced is forced to use our very public air transportation system. Airlines are simply far cheaper and safer and easier than private airplane ownership.
Driverless cars will be very popular. A driverless car that is not in fact driverless would not be popular. Why would these meanies promote a patently unpopular idea? Where's the profit in it?
Think, for a minute, like the selfish government and selfish CEOs of corporartions... That's right, you got it, they're obviously going to make it so that the system isn't fully automated (just like Pro suggested).
RE: What’s Game Theory?
The latter is a lie. There is blackmail involved....
What is important to note is that there is a snake-eating-tail scenario happening with Pro's enthusiastic assertion that it simply will be popular enough to become mainstream enough that the proportion of chaotic, human-consenting drivers are so few that the system can use the OTHER AI-controlled cars (as agents in the game-theory) to make it all function well. The issue is that if cars become readily available, cheaper in both fuel consumption and durability as they have to be built far less intense for accidents that are not just less common but less severe, then the entire global warming angle is re-negated by the fact that at all times, the human variables on the road are going to make absolutely everything about the system need to result in the cable-for-all tyranny where public transport is the only transport and we all go by train and/or bus.
... if the laziness of people will be sufficient motive to have driverless cars in the first place (which all will cost MUCH MORE, not less, than driven cars as they will begin a deluxe thing, as proven by which is more expensive on every single tech-upgraded version of anything in the history of mankind and products.
...AI malfunctioning in any kind of sudden hack or glitch that we can't even fathom today, such as has been seen in chat-bot receptionist-esque AI and in medical-human-replacement AI.
...intelligent AI surpassing us, even if desirable is going to be impossible and increasingly chaotic the longer that the system doesn't mandate surrender to it, which Pro has ruled out as being the policy-path taken.
CFB #2 The blame-game blackmails everyone to be fully alert the entire drive, anyway.
This is two-fold flawed in terms of the case of Pro. Let's ignore the absurd, constant reiteration that they 'obviously will become popular' for a second and think; if everyone begins to get cars instead of buses or trains, what's that going to do to the environment?
Less traffic means nothing,
but this is simply a means of cutting off the completely hilarious notion that we won't evolve transport just as brilliantly to not harm the environment without AI-control of the journeys.
Do you know, other than everyone taking bikes, what the solution is?
Think about it, everyone who is too dumb, lazy and/or wise with money is going to apparently be able to sit in a car that, at any moment could crash.
The only way to ever make a crash-free, traffic-jam free system is to blackmail all to use the AI.
If all use the AI, you may as well get rid of cars and incorporate a 24/7 tracking system for the tickets to the nationwide interconnected AI public transport network to enable the very level of surveillance and tyranny that it seems that Pro stands morally against.
- Popularity of cars is good and inevitable if we bring in autonomous vehicles into the trade of common cars, vans etc.
- This will lead to less traffic jams, less crashes and thus save fuel and save the environment which is a good in and of itself that comes at no cost other than surrendering to the AI that apparently we are not surrendering to.
Kyle Reese: Come with me if you want to live.Terminator: I'll be back.
Terminator: ‘Unlikely. I’m an obsolete design. T-X is faster, more powerful and more intelligent. It’s a far more effective killing machine’
1. The side which is less likely to doom and/or stunt humanity and its progress, is overall the one with less potential costs.
2. The side which is more likely to keep humanity at its peak, in both capacity and potential use of that capacity, ends up being the one with the most potential benefits.
3. If 1 and 2 both have the same victor in the comparison, that side definitely wins the debate.
- People who are too lazy, dumb and/or physically agile/nimble enough to get a license today may be able to qualify for more lenient tests for a driver's license, this combined with those too poor to afford 'more expensive' human cars (MORE EXPENSIVE? Pro really thinks somehow the additional cost of the entire AI technology is going to be a lesser cost than magically saved fuel and lack of accidents).
- This magical (and explained but bad) boom in the amount of drivers is all going to results in the environment being saved because... Nonsense.
- Either a tyrannical dictatorship takes over or the system is going to become very complicated with the game-theory coded into the AI suffering severely at the fact that there's more vehicles on the road than before and also at the fact that any vehicle, even that appears AI-controlled, can at any time for any reason be freely controlled by the human on board to randomise and ruin the entire advantage of foresight and accurate calculations of probability that the AI has.
- The blame-game is going to inevitably end up with the driver being the loser in any accident. This is completely and utterly supported by Pro to the point that Pro said 'well, duh, of course you're the one to blame you're free to control it there's no dictatorship!' to counter my first point.
- The only way the AI gets that good that it still achieves the avoiding of accidents and stuff that Pro suggests is if it's that intelligent (and 'autonomous' means it truly thinks for itself and evolves itself) that it can begin to alter itself and outsmart the entire human species and eliminating us. Once it's that good at what it does, it will be able to predict humans and their 'random' decisions in ways that don't make sense even to the smartest of us. It will understand how we think and adapt and adapt to our adaptation before we even are at that stage of thought or action. It will see the game-theory of our war millions of steps ahead of us and there is absolutely nothing we can do to stop it once it's that smart; which is precisely how smart it will have to be to predict random drivers (who are much more than there are today, proportionally thanks to the popularity of the AI cars and the looser license)... Get my point?
- The looser license is an utter joke. The reason the cars are more popular is that people who are still meant to be completely proficient in an emergency and blamed in an emergency are being allowed to drive despite being too lazy, dumb and/or physically incapable to drive proficiently so that now the system allows them to get a car knowing full well that if and when emergencies happen they won't be able to cope. The only alternative, which Pro never brought up but Con did, is that there's an extra-cost package and perhaps even license variant that lets you pay more for a dedicated human remote-controller ready to take over and get blamed for any emergency scenario. This increases the chance of error via glitch and hack and negates the entire 'increased popularity' notion as this cost won't be all that popular.
well he is top of the pops. You’re prettty up there yourself.
I don't like RM partly because he is arrogant. He thinks he is a demigod.
We should give RM props for so much participation when he's also top of the leaderboard. Most folks would tend to become very picky about what debates they grab once they are at the top. RM clearly believes in the competitions of the Free Market & good on him. I for one am thankful that his time is divided while he debates me.
How does RM manage 8 debates at once?
After some light skimming, I don't know who I'll vote for, but I must thank con for that entertaining game theory. ... I doubt this problem cyn be accurately mapped with standard game theory, due to the problem of evil.
Thanks for the offer but I think are harms and costs are reasonably synonymous in this context
'harms' and 'costs' are interchangeable in this debate in my opinion, if you say I changed the word tactically, I'll alter the word to 'harms' but it will be the same 4-step process I offer.
Making the case now, be warned that it is a passionate one made to move the audience, I am going to combat you with emotion just as much as fact and you should not be prepared for me forfeiting or coming in weak.
Do you remember this? I do. My first loss.
https://www.debate.org/debates/RESOLVED-driverless-cars-will-be-the-norm-within-the-next-20-years/1/
Precisely the sort of Neo-Luddism I’m seeking to assuage, Ragnar.
Do you want to get Maximum Overdrive? Because that's how you get Maximum Overdrive!
https://youtu.be/plc7ssXDYsk
...
Sorry con for spoiling your arguments.
I agree with your position on self driving cars. I support the right to these. I believe they are more beneficial to society in general since they reduce accident rates by about 90%.
Alec's & Blamonkey's interest are, of course, also welcome however much diminished in honor by their inferior positions on the leaderboard. I'm not, you know, not honored by your interest so much as I'm much more honored, obviously, by Ratman's deigning to advise my humble little offering.
I'm trying to become #1.
Blamonkey will be king for a few days on my estimation
Thx, Ratman. As king of the board, your interest is most welcome.
Con is 100% correct but Pro will 100% win. Once you realise how corrupt those up-top are and how easily they will cover up the assassination of anyone they want dead with a 'glitch accident', it will make you sick to your stomach. Until you realise that (and no, you can't prove it as they control search engines and evidence) then you're left in the dark and hope for the best in handing them the reigns.