Systemic Bias | Structural Bias
On the value of a single life: you create systems that work - you don't take life. You make smart decisions with resources - this is so your descendants aren't in dire straights.
Systemic bias refers to the inherent and often unconscious patterns of discrimination embedded within institutions, policies, and societal norms.
But the system to some degree reflects the biases we allow to propagate through our behaviors. In some cases, the systems magnify the biases held by their architects and underscore the patterns of indiscriminate behavior and outcomes that societal groups carry out.
A human recognizes patterns and outcomes of those patterns. Their machines recognize the other associated outcomes and embedded patterns below, or above our level of perception.
Terminal agency resides in our volition.