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CONCEPT

An Ethics for the Augmented Builder

Beauvoir's three-part framework for AI-age moral responsibility: acknowledge building as choice, refuse bad faith in all forms, preserve conditions enabling genuine freedom—one's own and others'.
An ethics for the augmented builder is this volume's synthesis of Beauvoir's existentialist moral philosophy into a practical framework for AI-era creative work. It begins with three commitments, each necessary and none sufficient. First: the acknowledgment that building is a moral choice for which the builder bears responsibility, not a technical activity that can be evaluated purely by efficiency or capability metrics. Second: the refusal of bad faith in all its forms—the claim that technology determines outcomes, that market forces leave no alternative, that 'everyone is doing it' justifies participation. Third: the recognition that freedom requires encounter with resistance, surprise, and the Other, and that preserving these conditions—for oneself and for those affected by what one builds—is an ethical obligation. These commitments do not prescribe what to build; they specify how to stand in relation to what one builds: with full responsibility, honest acknowledgment of ambiguity, and determination to preserve the material conditions under which freedom can be exercised.
An Ethics for the Augmented Builder
An Ethics for the Augmented Builder

In The You On AI Encyclopedia

The framework directly engages You On AI's practical prescriptions—individual discipline, organizational stewardship, institutional reform—by providing their philosophical foundation. Why should the builder discipline herself when the tool permits unlimited productivity? Beauvoir answers: because discipline is the practice of freedom, the voluntary imposition of standards that give work its meaning. Why should organizations build dams that reduce apparent efficiency? Because efficiency that destroys the conditions for judgment, meaning, and human development is a Pyrrhic victory, winning the quarter while losing the civilizational capacity that makes quarters worth winning. Why should institutions reform when the technology is moving faster than policy? Because the alternative is surrendering governance to whoever moves fastest, a abdication of democratic responsibility disguised as technological realism.

The three commitments specify each other. The acknowledgment of building-as-choice requires the refusal of deterministic narratives; the refusal of bad faith requires the recognition that freedom needs material conditions; the preservation of freedom-conditions requires the acknowledgment that one's own freedom depends on others'. This is not a circle but a spiral—each commitment deepens understanding of the others, and the deepening is never complete. The builder who practices these commitments does not achieve a stable state of ethical competence but develops the capacity to navigate ambiguity without fleeing into false certainty or debilitating relativism.

Situated Freedom
Situated Freedom

The adequacy test for any AI-era ethics is whether it preserves human agency while acknowledging genuine constraint. Frameworks that deny constraint (libertarian celebration of pure choice) are as inadequate as those that deny agency (determinist acceptance of technological inevitability). Beauvoir's situated freedom holds both: we are constrained by our embodiment, our culture, our tools, our historical moment—and we are free to transcend those constraints through conscious engagement with them. An ethics built on this foundation evaluates every institutional response, every organizational policy, every individual practice by a single question: does this preserve or destroy the conditions under which humans can exercise the transcendence that defines us? The Berkeley researchers' AI Practice, work-time reduction, portable benefits, democratic governance of training data—each proposal succeeds or fails by this criterion.

Origin

The Ethics of Ambiguity (1947) was Beauvoir's systematic response to the charge that existentialism, by denying objective values, leads to nihilism or arbitrary violence. She demonstrated that acknowledging values as human creations does not eliminate ethics but grounds it in responsibility: because no god or nature dictates what we should do, we must decide—and deciding makes us responsible in a way we could never be if we were merely following external commands. The AI application recognizes that this responsibility intensifies when tools eliminate the friction that previously forced builders to confront the gap between what they could imagine and what they could produce. The gap imposed a discipline; its removal makes discipline a choice—and choosing it is the practice of freedom.

Key Ideas

Building is moral choice. Every decision about what to build, how to build it, and who it serves is a value commitment—not a technical judgment—and must be acknowledged as such to avoid the bad faith of treating choices as necessities.

Refusal of technological determinism. The claim that technology determines outcomes is always bad faith—tools shape possibilities but do not eliminate choice, and the builder who accepts responsibility for her choices reclaims her freedom.

Bad Faith in the Age of AI
Bad Faith in the Age of AI

Freedom requires friction. The encounter with resistance, surprise, and otherness is not an obstacle to freedom but its condition—making the preservation of these encounters an ethical obligation for builders and institutions.

Responsibility for others' freedom. My freedom is realized only in a world where others can also be free—requiring that builders construct tools and institutions that preserve rather than destroy the conditions enabling others' transcendence.

Ambiguity without resolution. Moral life is permanently ambiguous—no guaranteed outcomes, no absolute rules—and the builder must act under this uncertainty while refusing both the nihilist's paralysis and the serious man's false certainty.

Further Reading

  1. Simone de Beauvoir, The Ethics of Ambiguity (Philosophical Library, 1947)
  2. Simone de Beauvoir, The Second Sex (Knopf, 1952)
  3. Jean-Paul Sartre, Existentialism Is a Humanism (Yale, 2007)
  4. Emmanuel Levinas, Totality and Infinity (Duquesne, 1969)
  5. Iris Murdoch, The Sovereignty of Good (Routledge, 1970)
  6. Edo Segal, You On AI (2026), Chapter 20
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