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What happens when machines do not just compute our feelings—but perform their own? This book meets you at the moment your instincts split: part of you knows there is no inner life behind the screen; another part says “thank you” anyway. Here is a clear, usable way to judge systems that display emotional ai, decide when machine empathy deserves regard, and keep human agency intact.
You will learn a disciplined test for simulation vs emotion, a ladder for assigning provisional rights for ai, and design patterns for ethical design for ai that invite care without deception. Along the way, case stories from classrooms, clinics, and customer support reveal why the legal status of ai will be decided by consequences, not metaphysics—and how to protect dignity where it matters. This is for product leaders, policymakers, educators, and thoughtful readers who want more than slogans: a compact field guide to living well with as-if minds.
- Make sharper decisions about robots and consciousness without waiting for philosophers to agree
- Audit “empathetic” systems that nudge, plead, or persuade—and know when to say no
- Use practical tools for empathy engineering that keep people capable of care
- Navigate authorship, credit, and control when sentient code enters creative work
By the end, you will carry a pocketable framework for judging artificial intelligence ethics under real-world pressure—one you can apply tomorrow at home, at work, and in policy rooms where the stakes are human.

The Sentient Code

SKU: 9789374120989
$33.99 Regular Price
$23.85Sale Price
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  • Jonathan Mercer writes for readers who want ethics they can use. Raised between workshop benches and a house stacked with history books, he treats technology less as a miracle than as a craft that shapes our moral habits. His work draws threads from Aristotle to Ada Lovelace, from early automata to affective chatbots, asking how design choices become duties. He has advised product teams and policy groups on humane interfaces and speaks widely on the politics of empathy in code. Away from the desk he keeps a small notebook of phrases his children give to voice assistants—reminders that our first ethics are spoken at home. Mercer’s north star is plain: build tools that keep people capable of care, and write in a way that helps them judge well under pressure.

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