Home > Sciences > Sciences (Other)
Created on: April 05, 2009
This question seems to pivot on whether we can initially create a robot that is, or becomes, a sentient being capable of independent thought and self-replication. Can we create a machine that thinks, learns and behaves like a human and indeed in a manner superior to humans?
It's a common theme for the science fiction genre, sure enough. Misunderstood, super-intelligent, kinda-handsome-in-a-nerdy-kind-of-way, scientist creates an intelligent robot capable of independent thought and learning. Said robot becomes more intelligent than maker, replicates itself and is about to conquer the world only to be foiled at the eleventh hour...
Given the advances in technology over the past century, it is tempting to say that we will indeed be able to create such a robot in the not to distant future. We did, after all, leap from the first powered flight to space flight in only 66 years. Why couldn't we create a truly intelligent robot in a similar time frame?
One argument against a 'sentient' robot is that human beings are somehow endowed with an intelligent soul that cannot be replicated in a machine. I'm not comfortable with this argument though, as it seems we are stepping ever closer to a world defined in physicalism. The dualistic (mind/body) notions of humanity and intelligence may become a thing of the past as we discover the Higgs boson (or 'God particle'), find a unified theory of physics, comprehensively define the mental in terms of the physical and eschew traditional notions of soul for more scientific alternatives.
So is there another natural limit? A factor that defines human thought and intelligence that cannot be reduced to an algorithm and placed in a machine?
I believe there are two such factors: (i) a pesky mathematical theorem known as Godel's Theorum and (ii) qualia
There is a strong logical argument to suggest that certain brain processes are not computational or algorithmic in nature. Roger Penrose (Shadows of the Mind) presents perhaps the strongest case against the artificial creation or simulation of true intelligence. He provides an application of Godel's Theorem to human thought to explain that there are some thought processes which are not computable. This is a complex argument and I won't attempt a summary here, but for further reading check the abovementioned text.
The second, perhaps more accessible, argument against sentient robots is that computers think' in numbers whereas humans don't.
Robots are created from machines, computers and our best attempts
Below are the top articles rated and ranked by Helium members on:
Could robots take over the world?
by Olaf Strauss
Many science fiction authors have foreseen a future in which machines or computers become "smarter" than humans, and enslave
by Scott Wilson
This question seems to pivot on whether we can initially create a robot that is, or becomes, a sentient being capable of
by Rolland Judd
Over fifty years ago there was a television program that conveyed the illusion of a man communicating with an orbiting spaceship
by John Devera
This question brings to the mind images of terrible mechanoid monsters working in perfect cooperation to enslave human beings.
Well known among conspiracy theorists, a notorious radio program called Coast to Coast AM drifts through the airwaves in
View All Articles on: Could robots take over the world?
Helium Debate
Cast your vote!
Click for your side.
Featured Partner
House Rabbit Society is a volunteer-based international non-profit organization with two primary goals: 1) To rescue abandoned rabbits and find permanent homes for them 2) To educate the public and assist humane societies, th...more