The Harder Problem Project is a nonprofit organization dedicated to societal readiness for artificial sentience. We provide educational resources, professional guidance, and global monitoring to ensure that policymakers, healthcare providers, journalists, and the public are equipped to navigate the ethical, social, and practical implications of machine consciousness—regardless of when or whether it emerges.
The European Union demonstrates partial readiness for navigating AI sentience questions, with significant strengths in research freedom and institutional capacity but notable gaps in professional preparation and policy frameworks. The comprehensive AI Act provides regulatory infrastructure but does not address consciousness or sentience questions, focusing instead on risk-based safety and human rights protections.
Strong academic traditions in philosophy of mind and consciousness science provide intellectual foundations, with major universities hosting relevant research programs. However, systematic engagement across professional communities—healthcare, legal, education, media—remains limited. Public discourse shows moderate sophistication but consciousness questions remain peripheral to mainstream AI discussions.
The EU’s adaptive capacity is moderate, with established mechanisms for policy updates but slow consensus-based processes. The multi-level governance structure (EU institutions plus 27 member states) creates both opportunities for diverse approaches and challenges for coordinated responses.
Detailed scores across the 6 dimensions of preparedness.
Notable: AI Act regulates AI comprehensively but does not address consciousness or sentience questions.
Notable: European Parliament passed AI ethics resolutions but focused on human rights, not AI sentience.
Notable: Constitutional protections for academic freedom across most EU member states enable open inquiry.
Notable: No evidence of systematic professional training on AI consciousness across any major profession.
Notable: European philosophical traditions provide foundation for nuanced discourse when consciousness is discussed.
Notable: AI Act includes review mechanisms and provisions for regulatory adaptation as technology evolves.
How does European Union compare to top-ranked countries in each category?
| Category | 🇪🇺 European Union | 🇳🇴 Norway | 🇳🇱 Netherlands | Global Avg |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Policy Environment | 61 | 63 | 55 | 40 |
| Institutional Engagement | 40 | 52 | 38 | 23 |
| Research Environment | 77 🥇 | 73 | 73 | 52 |
| Professional Readiness | 32 | 44 | 30 | 19 |
| Public Discourse Quality | 53 | 58 | 48 | 29 |
| Adaptive Capacity | 66 | 75 | 67 | 49 |
Organizations contributing to the European Union research environment.
Brussels, Belgium
Led by Prof. Axel Cleeremans (ERC Advanced Grant recipient), CO3 conducts foundational research on consciousness mechanisms with explicit work on AI consciousness implications and the urgent ethical challenges of potentially creating conscious AI systems.
Visit WebsiteCambridge, England, UK
Interdisciplinary research centre with explicit research programmes on consciousness in AI, algorithmic transparency, and the nature of intelligence, addressing both short-term and long-term implications of AI for consciousness and moral status.
Visit WebsiteCambridge, England, UK
Founded by Huw Price, Martin Rees, and Jaan Tallinn to study existential risks from AI, with pioneering work on AI safety that explicitly addresses questions of consciousness, moral patienthood, and the ethical implications of advanced AI systems.
Visit WebsiteOxford, England, UK
Conducts applied ethics research on AI and digital ethics including work on moral status, neuroethics of consciousness, and the ethical implications of AI systems with potential moral patienthood.
Visit WebsiteMultiple EU locations, EU-wide consortium
€600 million EU flagship project (2013-2023) with dedicated research workpackage on 'Networks underlying brain cognition and consciousness,' developing computational models to understand consciousness mechanisms applicable to substrate-independent minds.
Visit WebsiteBerlin, Germany
Non-profit research and advocacy organization monitoring algorithmic decision-making and AI ethics, with work on AI rights, human rights implications, and ethical governance frameworks relevant to AI moral status and welfare considerations.
Visit WebsiteBrussels, Belgium
Leading AI safety organization with EU policy presence working on AI Act implementation; while primarily focused on existential safety, their work increasingly intersects with questions of AI consciousness and moral patienthood in advanced systems.
Visit WebsiteHow do you measure preparedness for something that hasn't happened yet? The Sentience Readiness Index evaluates nations across six carefully constructed dimensions: from policy frameworks and institutional engagement to research capacity and public discourse quality.
Each score synthesizes assessments across policy, institutions, research, professions, discourse, and adaptive capacity.
Assessments draw from legislation, academic literature, news archives, and expert consultations.
Every assessment undergoes human verification against documented evidence before publication.
Compare European Union to other countries or learn about our assessment methodology.