I've spoken elsewhere of one great irony -- that there is nothing new about this endeavor. That every human generation embarks upon a similar exercise -- creating new entities that start out less intelligent and virtually helpless, but gradually transform into beings that are stronger, more capable, and sometimes more brilliant than their parents can imagine.
The difference between this older style of parenthood and the New Creation is not only that we are attempting to do all of the design de novo, with very little help from nature or evolution, but also that the pace is speeding up. It may even accelerate, once semi-intelligent computers assist in fashioning new and better successors.
See the full article at Contrary Brin or Tomorrow Happens.
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Well, quite clearly we cannot give rights to artificial intelligences. We need less rights, not more. For example, corporations have rights, and they are much more intelligent than robots. But corporations shouldn't have rights. Ergos, robots shouldn't have rights.
ReplyDeleteNS
Hello NS,
ReplyDeleteWe should not confuse robots with AI. Robots are built for a specific function, but an AI should be capable of independent thought.
Hmmm ... I'll say it first before you nail me with it ... I think we might find examples of people not capable of independent thought too, and therefore they should not have rights either.
It looks like you are right again, my friend. I'll give this more thought and see if I can't give a better answer.