CourseLover

(12)

$10/per page/Negotiable

About CourseLover

Levels Tought:
Elementary,Middle School,High School,College,University,PHD

Expertise:
Algebra,Applied Sciences See all
Algebra,Applied Sciences,Architecture and Design,Art & Design,Biology,Business & Finance,Calculus,Chemistry,Engineering,Health & Medical,HR Management,Law,Marketing,Math,Physics,Psychology,Programming,Science Hide all
Teaching Since: May 2017
Last Sign in: 283 Weeks Ago
Questions Answered: 27237
Tutorials Posted: 27372

Education

  • MCS,MBA(IT), Pursuing PHD
    Devry University
    Sep-2004 - Aug-2010

Experience

  • Assistant Financial Analyst
    NatSteel Holdings Pte Ltd
    Aug-2007 - Jul-2017

Category > Law Posted 10 Sep 2017 My Price 10.00

Term Paper - Should self-driving car be legal on the road?

Writing a term paper according to the provided outline(TermPaperOutline.pdf), and the topic is "Should self-driving car be legal on the road?".  Aim for between 10 and 15 pages, with the length depending in part on the amount of factual background that you need to provide for the audience. Your target audience for the paper is an educated professional who is familiar with computers (as a user) and what is going on in the world, but is not a computer scientist. That’s whom you want to convince that your position is correct.

There must be a bibliography/references section using either the APA guidelines (see Writing Arguments for details) OR ACM/IEEE format. Do not use MLA format. 

Make sure that the references you cite are appropriate, correctly formatted and all appear consistently in both the body of the text (citations) and in the references/bibliography section. 

 

 
 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 
Term Paper
Outline
Guozhu Zheng
gzheng30@gatech.edu
Should self
-
driving car
s
be legal on the road?
Introduction
and background
In 2010, Google revealed that it has been work
ing on the self
-
driving car that can
operate without
a
drive
r
’s
intervention.
It can
drive itself and maintain a s
afe distance in
steady traffic. It
can read
road sign
s and follow
traffic regulations. The incentives behind
th
ese driverless cars are the re
duction of
road accidents and congestions
, along
with
providing a safer road condition for human beings.
Experts believe that
Robot drivers
react faster than humans, have 360
-
degree perception and do not get distracted, sleepy or
intoxicated, the engineer
s argue. They speak in terms of lives saved and injuries avoided
more than 37,000 people died in car accidents in the United States in 2008.”
[2
]
Although the idea behind
these intelligent robot
-
driving vehicles
is beneficial for human
beings
, these vehic
les have their limitations and ethical problems
a
rise. Are these self
-
driving cars really safer than
human
operated
vehicles
? Should these se
lf
-
driving cars be
legal on
public road
s
?
Despite
the fact that
this new technology is still under
development, I
s
till
think it is necessary to discuss
related ethical problems beforehand.
Argument
I would like to claim that the development and the utilization of self
-
driving cars
will be beneficial to human beings
and should be well
developed
. Since this new
technology can no
t only make our road conditions better, it can also increase the
utilization of vehicles and dramatically reduce the number of cars on the road, I believe
this new technology should be made legal on public roads.
In order
for my opinion
to be
convincible,
the following description
s
of how
a
Google self
-
driving
car work
s
can
provide an example of
how safe and efficient a self
-
driving vehicle is compared to
automobiles driven by human drivers.
T
here is a huge difference between human driving
and robot driving
.
The benefit
s
of robot driving
is apparent, as machines do not
experience panic and can therefore make scientific decisions that are technically most
beneficial and secure for the vehicle’s passengers.
Counterargument
However, many argue that, precisely because of this lack of emotion, robot
driving could raise serious moral issues.
Can the self
-
driving car make the right decision
under some dangerous scenario?
One classical dilemma, proposed by philosoph
ers
Philippa Fo
ot and Judith Jarvis Thomson, is called the
Trolley Problem
.
One of the most
popular examples is the school
-
bus variant of the classic trolley problem in philosophy:
On
a narrow road, your robotic car detects an imminent head
-
on crash with a non
-
robotic
vehicle
a school bus full of kids, or perhaps a carload of teenagers bent on playing
“chicken” with you, knowing that your car is programmed to avoid crashes. Your car,
naturally, swerves to avoid the crash, sending it into a ditch or a tree and killing you in
the process.

 

 

Answers

(12)
Status NEW Posted 10 Sep 2017 07:09 AM My Price 10.00

----------- He-----------llo----------- Si-----------r/M-----------ada-----------m -----------Tha-----------nk -----------You----------- fo-----------r u-----------sin-----------g o-----------ur -----------web-----------sit-----------e a-----------nd -----------acq-----------uis-----------iti-----------on -----------of -----------my -----------pos-----------ted----------- so-----------lut-----------ion-----------. P-----------lea-----------se -----------pin-----------g m-----------e o-----------n c-----------hat----------- I -----------am -----------onl-----------ine----------- or----------- in-----------box----------- me----------- a -----------mes-----------sag-----------e I----------- wi-----------ll

Not Rated(0)