Exploring the psychology of GPT-4's Moral and Legal Reasoning

Large language models have been used as the foundation of highly sophisticated artificial intelligences, capable of delivering human-like responses to probes about legal and moral issues. However, these models are unreliable guides to their own inner workings, and even the engineering teams behind their creation are unable to explain exactly how they came to develop all of the capabilities they currently have. The emerging field of machine psychology seeks to gain insight into the processes and concepts that these models possess. In this paper, we employ the methods of psychology to probe into GPT-4's moral and legal reasoning. More specifically, we investigate the similarities and differences between GPT-4 and humans when it comes to intentionality ascriptions, judgments about causation, the morality of deception, moral foundations, the impact of moral luck on legal judgments, the concept of consent, and rule violation judgments. We find high correlations between human and AI responses, but also several significant systematic differences between them. We conclude with a discussion of the philosophical implications of our findings.

READ FULL TEXT

page 1

page 13

page 16

page 22

page 25

page 27

research
06/12/2023

Large Language Models as Tax Attorneys: A Case Study in Legal Capabilities Emergence

Better understanding of Large Language Models' (LLMs) legal analysis abi...
research
04/14/2023

How well do SOTA legal reasoning models support abductive reasoning?

We examine how well the state-of-the-art (SOTA) models used in legal rea...
research
09/29/2020

Legal Judgment Prediction (LJP) Amid the Advent of Autonomous AI Legal Reasoning

Legal Judgment Prediction (LJP) is a longstanding and open topic in the ...
research
07/27/2023

LLMediator: GPT-4 Assisted Online Dispute Resolution

In this article, we introduce LLMediator, an experimental platform desig...
research
08/19/2021

The Legislative Recipe: Syntax for Machine-Readable Legislation

Legal interpretation is a linguistic venture. In judicial opinions, for ...
research
09/10/2020

On the Fairness of 'Fake' Data in Legal AI

The economics of smaller budgets and larger case numbers necessitates th...
research
09/19/2023

Dialogues with algorithms

In this short paper we focus on human in the loop for rule-based softwar...

Please sign up or login with your details

Forgot password? Click here to reset