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    For a robot to be damaged or destroyed means it cannot pe... — Carmelics
    Home/Virtue Ethics
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    Challenges→Entities with functions can have values, even if they are non-living.

    For a robot to be damaged or destroyed means it cannot perform its functions well, or at all.

    Consciousness & MindVirtue Ethics
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    Virtue EthicsConsciousness & Mind

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    Entities with functions can have values, even if they are non-living.Real robots can be damaged or destroyed by external and internal events.What an entity needs to function well constitutes its values.

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    The problem with this argument is that all it shows is that an entity that cannot be destroyed or harmed cannot have values, and not that a non-living entity cannot have values. Unlike the robot of this example, real robots can be damaged or destroyed, by external as well as internal events. What it means for them to be damaged or destroyed is that they cannot perform their functions well, or at all. Hence they can, quite straightforwardly, be said to have values.[3] To take this into account,

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