Doc Savage Fan
Lifer
- Nov 30, 2006
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Or perhaps...Stepford Wives.Two movies come to mind "AI" and "Cherry 2000" more relevant then "Firefly" in the sexbot area.
Or perhaps...Stepford Wives.Two movies come to mind "AI" and "Cherry 2000" more relevant then "Firefly" in the sexbot area.
What if the robot had consciousness, free will, and felt love?
Is there not?
Define the point where something gets free will for me then. And how do we test that.
Same for consciousness and love (good luck with that one!)
Hook it up with a blood-oxygen monitor, and you could be choked to 0.0025" of death with 3σ repeatability.The current high water mark for stupid, embarrassing ways to die is autoerotic asphyxiation (other than being hit by a train, which is even dumber). Imagine the new possibilities opened up with the addition of robots.
I always wanted the Borg story in Star Trek to show that humans created them by accident. Make little nanoprobes to perfect human DNA, and a few programming bugs showed up after they'd been on the market for awhile.Then it wouldn't be a robot, and could grant consent, or not.
The more interesting issue to me is the inevitable merging of technology and our species. We've seen just the very beginning with pacemakers, biomechanical prosthetics, and deep brain stimulation.
Follow that progression another hundred, thousand, or ten thousand years.
Two movies come to mind "AI" and "Cherry 2000" more relevant then "Firefly" in the sexbot area.
Can you stick a device to some access point and read out it's next action? = no free will.
Same for the other stuff, if it's code and you can see what trigers what by reading that code than it's not real.
I expect people having their needs fulfilled are LESS likely to abuse women.
I see, sex robots will lessen the power between a woman's legs.
I'm guessing she would be opposed to any "sex toy" that looked too realistic. Here's most of the rest of the article:
Can you stick a device to some access point and read out it's next action? = no free will.
Same for the other stuff, if it's code and you can see what trigers what by reading that code than it's not real.
A very good question.
We'd first need to be able to determine that a robot had one or more of those characteristics. And if that were possible, and robots did indeed possess at least one of these, then we shouldn't be allowed to "exploit" them for ANY purpose. For example, if a computer had consciousness, how could we justify "owning" that computer? How could we justify using it essentially as a slave, whether for sex or any other service?
How so? Elaborate.
The question comes down to what level of "consciousness" are we talking about? By most definitions of the word dolphins are conscious yet we exploit them at our leisure to this day.
Replace women with a robot who does not bring up stuff you did a decade ago?
Sounds good to me.
A robot who does not complain, grip, get moody, get fat, or spend money. Where do I buy one?
I expect people having their needs fulfilled are LESS likely to abuse women.
I guess this researcher would also rule out total-immersion, virtual-reality sex, with full-body "stimulators", even though not a single robot was harmed in the making of the, er, video.
Follow that progression another hundred, thousand, or ten thousand years.
We simply can't perceive that far into the future. How crazy would a person in 1915 considered to be if they were talking about things that we take for granted today like smartphones. Hell my phone is more powerful than a quarter of the computers I have built for myself in my lifetime. When I was building my new PC a decade or so ago and someone came along and said that I'd have something more (or equally) powerful that fit in my pocket and went everywhere I did I would have called bullshit.
They may not (or may) be anti-sex, but they are clearly insane. Not to mention inane. If this is the most worthy social cause they can think of to champion, someone should find them socially useful work like sweeping sidewalks somewhere...Richardson — with Erik Billing of the University of Skövde in Sweden, the co-creator of the Campaign Against Sex Robots — said that she is not anti-sex
And - I ask purely out of intellectual curiosity of course - where does one volunteer for such studies?:whiste:what kind of "research" enables one to claim that sex with hypothetical robots is unethical?
These researchers are actually guilty of mixing their messages. On the one hand, when (not if) sentient computer systems are created, I agree with them that there will be significant ethical considerations that will need to be worked out.They may not (or may) be anti-sex, but they are clearly insane. Not to mention inane. If this is the most worthy social cause they can think of to champion, someone should find them socially useful work like sweeping sidewalks somewhere...
If sentient artificial intelligence/robots existed, I'd agree with them, though on different grounds. But as it stands, we're talking about (somewhat more complex than usual) mechanical sex toys. Are they opposed to vibrating dildos, too? :hmm:
I don't think that anything is tied down as hard and fast when it comes to determining whether a robot has consciousness. Though the hurdle for consent for consent or ownership may not have to be that high.
An analogy for ownership is akin to that of pets. In the case of pets, some of the more militant PETA members would argue that no human has the right to own an animal. Is it surprising that some Feminist would argue for a prohibition of humans, especially males, having sex with robots? This is link is quite old, so you need not point this out.
http://www.dogforums.com/general-dog-forum/17919-peta-pet-slavery.html
The official current views of PETA are here. But they avoid the term ownership, at least on the first page.
http://www.peta.org/about-peta/why-peta/pets/