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28206. Adam Selene - 4/20/2006 6:37:55 PM

Well, if you duplicate a human at higher cost, then ya, hardly profitable. But if you create a "pure" intelligence that doesn't need sleep, take coffee breaks, ask for a salary, get pregnant, go on strike, need oxygen, sue anyone, etc... now that's a whole 'nother story.

28207. PelleNilsson - 4/20/2006 6:58:28 PM

Exactly. What is the profit in creating machines that emulate the fuzziness, the unpredictability, the moodiness, the irrationality of us humans? The whole thing is a strawman created by Adam, the best use of which is to chop it up, perhaps by the machine below, and use the proceeds in alistair's pony stables.



International Harvester, model M, 6 HP, 1929.

28208. Adam Selene - 4/20/2006 7:48:10 PM

The "strawman" failed to elicit the response I expected. Funny that. Not too many years ago, people would have been all, "you can never make a machine that is really intelligent," or "it will always be a machine, it won't be alive or anything like that." That was waaayy back in the days when we thought of making people more machine-like, (a la Mr. Spock.) But in the post Data-Android days... we think more about making machine human-like and no one seems to be aghast that we could even possibly create such a thing.

Times, they are a changin'.

28209. sakonige - 4/21/2006 7:13:38 AM

doesn't seem that strange to me to love a machine. People do it all the time, especially men. A beautiful machine seems alive. It's a small step to a beautiful intelligent machine being alive.

28210. alistairconnor - 4/21/2006 9:28:40 AM

Outlawed or not, it will happen just like every other possible (and profitable) technology.

I don't accept that as inevitable. If there is a moral imperative involved (and I believe there is), then as moral beings we must oppose it. For example : would you concede that genocide is inevitable? I contend that it is not : that all moral entities must remain vigilant and intervene by all means to prevent it.

28211. Adam Selene - 4/21/2006 2:11:22 PM

"Personally I think all frontier stuff should be outlawed, because I think it's important that we avoid getting into such moral ambiguities." - Alistair

I think I need more clarification... there are lot's issues that are moral abiguities to some but not to others. Convince me that it's immoral to have an intelligent and alive creature that is created artificially by man.

28212. PelleNilsson - 4/21/2006 4:28:46 PM

Define "alive".

28213. Adam Selene - 4/21/2006 6:58:13 PM

Define alive.

Oh, you know, the usual definition. ;)

Use whatever definition suits you, as long as it is modified to include: "intentionally created by humans from non-living materials." It can have progeny, or be a progeny, but it or some specific ancester must be the first one that was created by humans. It cannot result from a reproduction (natural or otherwise) of an existing life form, it has to be an original design.

A typical definition would include:
1) adapts to its environment
2) reacts to stimuli
3) reproduces itself
4) capable of perpetuating itself in a "natural" environment (Without intential and ongoing intervention of others, that is, as apart from what occurs in an ecosystem.)

and I would also require intelligence which is just has hard to define, but would include:
1) self-aware
2) aware of its own mortality
3) capable of abstract communication.

So - why would creating such a thing be immoral?

28214. Ulgine Barrows - 4/22/2006 6:37:24 AM

heh, they're already working your ass, aren't they

28215. Ulgine Barrows - 4/22/2006 6:39:24 AM

mmmm.....that comment was to the new host,Adam

yep, they're workin ya

28216. alistairConnor - 4/22/2006 3:57:24 PM

Convince me that it's immoral to have an intelligent and alive creature that is created artificially by man.

You misread me Adam, that's not my thesis. I don't have a problem with that (or if I do, it's an entirely different problem). What I want to outlaw is any blurring of the lines between human intelligence and created intelligence.

28217. PelleNilsson - 4/22/2006 4:26:26 PM

Alistair is clearly an Asimovian. How shall we label Adam? Would Philipdickian do?

28218. Adam Selene - 4/22/2006 5:56:16 PM

alistair, could you explain what you mean by blurring the lines? You mean by granting artifical intelligencses any kind of human rights?

Pelle, Adam is... well, consider the source of my namesake. :)

28219. Adam Selene - 4/22/2006 5:57:50 PM

Ulgine... well, I asked for it I guess. ;)

28220. PelleNilsson - 4/22/2006 6:07:19 PM

Aah, a Heinleinan!

28221. Adam Selene - 4/22/2006 7:00:10 PM

It's funny, I've been using this pseudonym for so long online that I sometimes forget that it's not my real name... ;) But, ya, Heinleinian it is. It's a perfect match on a couple of fronts... Adam Selene was a libertarian who helped lead the moon to independence from earth in The Moon is a Harsh Mistress. He was also a conscious machine and was treated as a fellow sentient being by his human friends, another theme I'm fond of in many respects. I've worked in artificial intelligence and neural networks professionally, and I only missed having a minor in psychology by a couple of credits when I earned my MS in Comp Sci, so I naturally have lots of theories about how thinking actually works and can be realized "artificially."

28222. alistairConnor - 4/22/2006 9:41:10 PM

Yes, I was hesitating between Heinlein-head and Philipdickhead...

28223. Adam Selene - 4/22/2006 9:51:49 PM

lol!

28224. judithathome - 4/22/2006 11:16:39 PM

doesn't seem that strange to me to love a machine

Me, neither...I love and adore my car.

28225. Ulgine Barrows - 4/23/2006 3:08:28 AM

I value my possessions but I don't love them....
refrigerator, PC, car, tiller, washing machine, microwave, vacuum, dryer, oven, shovel, iron, broom, needles...

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