Exploring the Philosophy of Consciousness in AI: An Ethical Appraisal

Authors

Chelcia B Sangma

Ph.D., Research Scholar, Department of Philosophy, Annamalai University (India)

Dr. S. Thanigaivelan

Assistant Professor, Department of Philosophy, Annamalai University, Tamil Nadu (India)

Article Information

DOI: 10.51584/IJRIAS.2026.110200077

Subject Category: Artificial Intelligence

Volume/Issue: 11/2 | Page No: 916-923

Publication Timeline

Submitted: 2026-02-21

Accepted: 2026-02-27

Published: 2026-03-12

Abstract

The rapid development of artificial intelligence has revived enduring philosophical questions about the nature of consciousness, mind, and moral responsibility. This paper examines whether advanced AI systems could possess forms of awareness comparable to human consciousness. It analyzes the implications of such a possibility through major philosophical perspectives, including dualism, physicalism, functionalism, and panpsychism. By evaluating contemporary debates in philosophy of mind alongside current technological progress, the study investigates whether consciousness is an emergent property of complex computation or a fundamentally non-computational phenomenon. The ethical dimension is central to this inquiry: if AI were to attain conscious states, issues concerning moral status, rights, accountability, and the boundaries between human and machine agency would arise. The paper also considers the risks of prematurely attributing consciousness, which may distort ethical decision-making and public understanding of AI. Ultimately, this study argues that philosophical reflection is essential for guiding responsible AI development, ensuring that technological innovation remains aligned with human values, dignity, and social well-being.

Keywords

Artificial Intelligence, Consciousness, Philosophy of Mind, AI Ethics, Machine Awareness, Moral Status

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