[MaFLa] Reminder: CFP - Artificial Intelligence issue, Hungarian Philosophical Review; deadline: October 1, 2019

Zsuzsanna Balogh baloghzsphil at gmail.com
Thu Sep 12 10:10:06 CEST 2019


*Call For Papers - reminder: *



*The Hungarian Philosophical Review*. The Journal of the Philosophical
Committee of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences.



The Hungarian Philosophical Review
<https://urldefense.proofpoint.com/v2/url?u=http-3A__filozofiaiszemle.net_en_about-2Dour-2Dquarterly_&d=DwMFaQ&c=slrrB7dE8n7gBJbeO0g-IQ&r=ZfhoVoOxW1cDe6OkqMWRc1DnamnUb1TGL5z7c164Q2M&m=L99jh0beSuK0dV4aPBgcxYIEajq_CqA7rB_YHIt7AVc&s=DQkQ13HYTJOcPBJym-m1Z033F-ErbstA3ruWUd8mPaY&e=>,
the leading peer-reviewed philosophy journal of Hungary, regularly
publishes English-language thematic issues that are open access. The
upcoming such issue will be published in winter 2019/2020. The Journal
welcomes submissions on the following topic:



*Artificial Intelligence *

Volume 63, Issue 4 (2019)

(open access issue)



*Guest editors:*

*Zsuzsanna Balogh,  Judit Szalai*, *Zsofia Zvolenszky* (Institute of
Philosophy, Eötvös Lóránd University, Budapest)



*Description:* Systems employing artificial intelligence--AI systems--play
an increasingly important role in many sectors of society (such as
transport, health, and education). AI systems perform tasks that only human
agents have been able to so far, which raises a number of philosophical
questions. To what extent and in what ways can human expectations and norms
be applied to these systems? Can AI systems be held responsible for their
behavior or actions, or is it appropriate to attribute this responsibility
to human agents or institutions instead? Can AI systems have mental states?
How can mechanisms of human agency be programmed into AI systems? How do we
as human agents relate to them? We welcome articles for our thematic
*English-language *issue that address philosophical problems related to AI
systems (and, more generally, new digital technologies) from the
perspective of moral philosophy, logic, social philosophy, and the
philosophy of law.



Papers should not exceed *7000 words *and should contain a 150-200 word
abstract. For further instructions for authors, please consult the
Journal’s style sheet here
<https://urldefense.proofpoint.com/v2/url?u=http-3A__filozofiaiszemle.net_en_for-2Dthe-2Dauthors_&d=DwMFaQ&c=slrrB7dE8n7gBJbeO0g-IQ&r=ZfhoVoOxW1cDe6OkqMWRc1DnamnUb1TGL5z7c164Q2M&m=L99jh0beSuK0dV4aPBgcxYIEajq_CqA7rB_YHIt7AVc&s=1KtV2-Q1hkH_waDxjHVH4lsNOloKSPTc5AtP8wl8ZLo&e=>
.

*Deadline for submission*: *October 1, 2019*

Manuscripts and queries should be sent to
MagyarFilozofiai.Szemle at btk.mta.hu

and Zsuzsanna Balogh at baloghzsphil at gmail.com



The Hungarian Philosophical Review, with a history going back to 1882, has
been a pivotal peer-reviewed venue for philosophical exchange within the
Hungarian philosophical community. The Review takes a neutral stance among
the various schools and movements of the philosophical profession, and aims
to cover all significant achievements of philosophical scholarship without
a narrow specialization.

To browse the Review’s back issues since 2010, including regular thematic
issues published in English, visit
http://filozofiaiszemle.net/en/back-issues/
<https://urldefense.proofpoint.com/v2/url?u=http-3A__filozofiaiszemle.net_en_back-2Dissues_&d=DwMFaQ&c=slrrB7dE8n7gBJbeO0g-IQ&r=ZfhoVoOxW1cDe6OkqMWRc1DnamnUb1TGL5z7c164Q2M&m=L99jh0beSuK0dV4aPBgcxYIEajq_CqA7rB_YHIt7AVc&s=DaeHPx-Qo9KgNEd_0n6wnw7eN3DakRqJLuipFclHrR8&e=>.
For full-text issues dating back to 1957, visit
http://real-j.mtak.hu/view/journal/Magyar_Filoz=F3fiai_Szemle.html
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