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According to Lovett (2012), it is important that the constraints put on the exercise
of power are ‘reliably effective.’ In order to be reliably effective, constraints must
remain effective over a wide range of possible changes or modifications in the
relevant circumstances. In a similar context, Pettit proposed ‘non-manipulability’ as
a criterion institutional ‘instruments’ should satisfy:
‘Designed to further certain public ends, they should be
maximally resistant to
being deployed on an arbitrary, perhaps
sectional, basis. No one individual or group should have discretion
in how the instruments are used... The institutions and initiatives
involved should not allow of manipulation at anyone’s individual
whim.’ (Pettit, 1997, p. 173)
He then lays out three conditions that a ‘non-manipulable’ system must satisfy.
This includes firstly the rule of law, according to which laws ‘should be general and
apply to everyone, including the legislators themselves; they should be promulgated
and made known in advance
to those to whom they apply; they should be
intelligible, consistent, and not subject to constant change; and so on’ (Pettit, 1997,
p. 174). Secondly, the dispersion-of-power condition requires that ‘powers which
officials have under any regime of law should be dispersed’ by mechanisms such as
the separation of powers, bi-cameralism, federalism,
and international legalism
(Pettit, 1997, pp. 177–80). The third condition states that laws should be insulated
from ‘excessively easy majoritarian change’ (Pettit, 1997, p. 180).
Does the God Machine satisfy these conditions? There is no reason why it should
not be possible. Taking Persson and Savulescu’s (2012a) scenario at face value,
there is no reason to suspect that the God Machine society would necessarily fail to
institute such protections. Even systems that do what is beyond the ability of one
human to do can be reviewed and controlled – for example, the assumptions on
which the computations were made can be accessible
to further analysis by
computer systems independent of the God Machine, predictions generated by the
God Machine can be tested and the system’s workings subject to regular audit by a
group of auditors immune to the machine’s influence, every intervention of the God
Machine might have to be reviewed by an independent computer system and a
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human, etc.
36
The second question would be about whether the God Machine is
vulnerable to abuse by others. This question can only be answered with reference to
the political context that the God Machine is placed in. To the extent that this is
presented
by the authors, one can suspect that in a morally (and politically?)
enhanced society appropriate checks on the access to the God Machine will be
placed, and the representative system characterised by legitimacy and transparency
is likely to be stable.
The most convincing argument in this context (Harris, 2014a) comes from the fact
that the God Machine society’s citizens would not know when the lawful
intervention would take effect, and thus have no opportunity to question, respond to
or challenge this intervention. The God Machine would therefore lack an important
feature that allows for the protection of liberty. Overall however, if we take the God
Machine at face value and thus accept the facts about the possible world it was
placed in, the arguments that attempt to establish that the God Machine powers are
beyond societies’ review largely fails.
The God Machine is not necessarily inimical to appropriate control, at least as
presented by
Savulescu and Persson (2012a).
As a result, Sparrow’s account does
not support either plausible interpretation of freedom from domination as the right
kind of structural relation between the God Machine and the citizens –
the God
Machine does not obviously fail the ‘checks and balances’ requirement and it is not
clear that the God Machine would serve to establish a relation of domination
between some members of the God Machine society and others. A further argument
may develop the in-principle problems of auditing and controlling an entity like the
God Machine, but in the absence of such an argument, the objection fails.
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