The United Kingdom Office of Science and Innovation foresees the day when robots will be able to reproduce and think for themselves.
Tenshi no Ai wrote: Besides, there's WAY better things to worry about instead of thinking on intellegent robots, global warming dooming man kind, or whatever else scientists think about^^
Tenshi no Ai wrote:But to think for itself, I say is impossible^^ I mean, they can only go as far as their programming goes...
kaemmerite wrote:And by reproduce I think they mean being capable enough to build other robots.
They already have programs that adapt to failure and learn from it using something called genetic algorithms.Tenshi no Ai wrote:How robots would be able to do that, I have no clue. Would they like, go to the factory themselves and make almost clone-like beings, or if a part falls off, would they be like a starfish and regenerate into a new mind? A head scratcher for sure... :/ But to think for itself, I say is impossible^^ I mean, they can only go as far as their programming goes...
Read the complete article at http://www.discover.com/issues/aug-03/departments/feattech/Discover Magazine wrote:[size=75]Torsten Reil, an Oxford researcher turned animation entrepreneur, decided to borrow a page from nature and use the power of evolution to solve the problem of making a digitized character move convincingly. "First, we created a simple stick figure: It's got gravity]
Besides, there's WAY better things to worry about instead of thinking on intellegent robots, global warming dooming man kind, or whatever else scientists think about^^
Yeah, things like global warming are not moot issues and they are definitely not going to work themselves out. Don't go dissing science. XDikimasu wrote:Sorry, I don't know if ou where being serious or not, but the mentality of "don't worry about it, the scientists will figure it out" really irks me.
ikimasu wrote:Sorry, I don't know if ou where being serious or not, but the mentality of "don't worry about it, the scientists will figure it out" really irks me.
I see what you're saying now. But, yeah, the reason global warming is an issue is deeper than paranoid fear of the world ending, its to protect fucture generations from suffering from our mistakes... but I understand why someone would be realistically more worried about, say, child soliders or human trafficking... that is very dire and needs to be dealt with.Tenshi no Ai wrote:Oh no, that's not what I meant at all^^ I more meant that some people are so concerned with the world ending due to these reasons, when in reality, we don't even KNOW when the true end will come. I just used global warming as an example, in which some peopple think that it'll be the factor that kills the world and all. And by "better things to worry about" I meant like, not to be paranoid about the world ending and like, share God with others, you know? But anyways that's a bit offtrack^^ Just explaining myself for what I meant there...
Kawaiikneko wrote:You know what a real safe alternative to this is? to NOT improve their AI so much that they want rights! *gasp* I mean... if we monitor and control the rate that their AI "evolves" then it should never be a problem because they are created, fake beings and not real humans. Also, demanding rights is an emotional issue (in my mind anyways), and as of yet robots are not capable of emotion.
Warrior4Christ wrote:Humans invented robots to make our lives easier, not to be an entity to themselves.
Me (Incoherent ramblings that got me an A) wrote:Question 4: Do you think that digital computers can perceive and be conscious? Does a computer need a body in order to be aware?
Can computers perceive and be conscious? The potential for computers to perceive and be conscious depends on the definitions of perception and consciousness, which are inconveniently yet expectedly under dispute.
If human consciousness is indeed nothing more than carbon-based logic gates, then it is only a matter of time before neurologists fully decode the human mind for programmers to make a perfect model of it.
If human consciousness is linked to dimensions beyond the 4 that science can measure, or if it depends on quasi-random processes such as those involved in quantum mechanics, then creating a conscious mind using the standard binary logic of computers seems impossible. But should computing technology be invented in the future that utilizes these now-unknown properties of human minds and is not founded on simple binary logic, then creating an artificial conscious mind is more feasible.
If computer consciousness is possible, a question that arises is whether or not a computer needs a body in order to be aware. One of the fundamental aspects of computer programs is that they can’t possibly tell where input data is coming from, (unless they are given additional data about where input is coming from, which could easily be faked.) So, sensory information being fed from physical sight and touch sensors should make no difference to a digital mind than being fed information from virtual sight and touch sensors within a completely virtual environment. Both a physical body and a virtual body emulating a physical body have the same effect on a computer.
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