Wednesday, January 30, 2013

Robots

In both Robot Stories and Alone Together the idea of robots replacing humans is present. In the first vignette a robot stands in for a baby for a couple; in Alone Together Turkle begins to talk about care robots for children and the elderly. One thing that really struck me in the book was children's responses to the idea of a robotic babysitter. Their concerns were practical and many of them concluded that if a robot was more efficient than a human babysitter it would be a better babysitter. I also noticed when the subject came up in class that Dr. Langguth's primary objection (not to put you on the spot) was that it would respond with in-ordinary or inappropriate responses like the chat bots we talked to during the Turing test. I also noticed that some people's objection to the robot baby in Robot Stories was that it did not look like a real baby. While these are valid concerns regarding robots, I think they exemplify Turkle's concern expressed in the preface that we no longer care if there is something real, alive, or human behind the illusion as long as it is a good one.

1 comment:

Jerome Langguth said...

Good comment.I actually agree with you (and Turkle) that the main ethical problem in this case is that "we no longer care if there is something real, alive, or human behind the illusion as long as it is a good one." The point about the robot's failure with respect to the Turing test is just that the AI project itself (building a machine that thinks like a human being) may be unrealizable. Maybe that is a good thing.