Whether social robots merit full moral consideration is a major question. Sweeney argues for a model of fictional dualism to better analyze and deal with social robots, to whom people may respond in social and emotional ways but without the demand for moral consideration. She proposes seeing social robots as embodied fictional characters with mental lives that humans create by engaging with them. She claims this model can explain a range of feelings people might develop by interacting with these entities without justifying their full moral consideration. This model, she argues, legitimates human trust in these entities, but not a trust based entirely on appearance. Sweeney believes this obligates developers to be abundantly clear about these robots' capabilities and any changes to them. People must develop a background awareness that robots are not capable of having feelings for them. Recommended. All readership levels.