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When Will the Robots Take Over?

July 16th, 2009 · → 6 Comments

Written by Lee Schneider, founder of DocuCinema

robot_istockThe robots might have taken over already. There’s enough artificial intelligence out there to write this blog without human intervention. Computers can already beat chess masters by brute computational force. And look! Google Translate can change this into Norwegian: Google oversetter kan oversette denne bloggen. Vel, I kan probably måken thaten up mysefen withouten any programvare. But anyway …

For a ReelzChannel segment we did recently, we interviewed Dan Burrus, the author of Technotrends. He made this somewhat scary point about texting: When we text on our phones we have adopted a machine language, behaving more like tippy-tappy automatons than talky, expressive people. Maybe, click by click, we’re edging closer to world robotic domination. But maybe not. Machines need us to type because they’re still too dumb to understand us when we talk – try saying “radio on” to the voice-actuated thingie in your car and it will likely respond “ejector seat ready – prepare to exit.”

Voice recognition glitches aside, robots are trying to do more than ever. Dr. Monika Hagen thinks robots should be able to heal us. She’s been researching robotic surgery at the University of California, San Diego.monica

“The field is exploding. More and more robots are being sold and more and more procedures are being performed with these robots.” — Dr. Monika Hagen.

Dr. Hagen is developing procedures like minimally invasive abdominal surgery. You move controllers that look suspiciously like a video game and the robot makes the cuts. Don’t try this at home – you do need training.

If you want to worry about something, try this: Robots are already learning how to build themselves. How long before they build very sophisticated versions of themselves – enough to become self aware? When a computer becomes aware of itself you could say it achieves consciousness. After that happens, what’s the only difference between you and your laptop? A soul. When machines become self aware it will likely push us toward forging a new definition of the soul and a new quest for scientific proof that it exists uniquely in humans.

Remember the movie “21 Grams?” The title comes from the belief that the body loses 21 grams as the soul leaves the body. The number comes from research conducted in 1907 by Dr. Duncan MacDougall. He made a special bed built upon scales. He placed patients who were dying on it and measured what happened when they expired. Unfortunately, his results were wildly inconsistent – only one of his six test subjects lost 21 grams at death. But people want to believe in the soul – so much so that they want to believe it has an actual, measurable weight. It’s not very scientific, but it is poetic and intensely human. It will be a long time before any machine comes up with a belief system like that.

Or as we say in Norwegian, Det vil være en lang tid før maskinen kommer opp med en tro systemet sånn. (Thanks, Google Translator.)

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6 Comments so far ↓

  • Bob Ellal

    Hi Lee,

    The concept of soul–I struggle with it. My experiences with paranormal phenomenon–angry ghosts–make me think it might exist. But suppose there is a soul that survives–and there is no real God. Could life after death be as chaotic as life as a human being? That thought gives me pause.

    But there is something to the human spirit that no machine can ever reproduce–the will to go on when every odd is against you, when you think you can’t endure any more pain–then you dig down and say “I can stand one more minute.” Then the minutes add up to hours and days. And you survive. A machine would calculate the odds and power down.

    Best regards,

    Bob

    • Lee Schneider

      Thanks for commenting. You’re right about that – the unstoppable will to live is unmistakably human, or at least uniquely biological. Then again, they’ve made a lot of Terminator movies about robots who refuse to die!

  • John Mikulak

    Hey Lee…funny…I’ve been reading a lot of Phillip K. Dick lately — tons of his short stories. He was obsessed with the idea that machines would take over and off humanity. It makes you chuckle UNTIL you read something crazy like the new “corpse eating robot”…mmm…nothing like battlefield cleanup with hungry robots….
    http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2009/07/15/military-eatr-contractor_n_233467.html

  • Jeff Schneider

    “I’ll be back…” Yep.

    I’m involved at work now with a project that uses robotics. In one case we have a robot that’s picking and placing 2 1/4″ disk drives in racks for testing. It’s fascinating to watch as this thing zips around making perfect, precise movements. I’m not too worried yet, however. So far the robots only seem to do what you tell them to, with painstaking accuracy. It’s really obvious when you tell them to do something stupid! .. and they execute exactly.

    I do think about how things have changed so much in our communication, however. Machines are in the loop now with all of our thoughts and comments to each other, about everything, even the mundane. Every text message, e-mail, and this comment I’m writing now end up on a server somewhere. I guess there’s so much traffic that it’s unintelligible to anyone watching, unless they were looking for something specific. Ah, well, at least I hope so!

    Watch what you comment… the machines can see it all! :-)

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