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My Name is Marcus Wright


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No. For much the same reason that I wouldn't treat a man who thought that he was god AS god.

 

 

*Disclaimer: I fully recognize the huge number of subtle complexities I've just brushed over.

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No. For much the same reason that I wouldn't treat a man who thought that he was god AS god.

 

 

*Disclaimer: I fully recognize the huge number of subtle complexities I've just brushed over.

 

If having the capacity to feel human is not enough to treat a machine as a person, what is? Can machines ever achieve personhood? Is there some innate characteristic of our chemical composition that machines necessarily lack which causes them to forever fall out of the realm of moral concern?

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Aren't we all but complex biological machines?

 

If a machine is indistiguishable from a human being -- if it has consciousness and thought process and believes itself to be a human being, then we might not CALL it human, but we would probably consider treating it as human, or at least giving it some rights. Perhaps call it a person, instead?

 

Otherwise, well.. we would have to explain what's so special about a biological human as opposed to a non-biological entity with consciousness.

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Aren't we all but complex biological machines?

 

If a machine is indistiguishable from a human being -- if it has consciousness and thought process and believes itself to be a human being, then we might not CALL it human, but we would probably consider treating it as human, or at least giving it some rights. Perhaps call it a person, instead?

 

Otherwise, well.. we would have to explain what's so special about a biological human as opposed to a non-biological entity with consciousness.

 

If it feels human, we should probably give it equal rights for our protection, if nothing else. All this has happened before and will happen again.

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I don't think "feels human" is the only rule, though. If we program it to "feel human" but have nothing other than that, then what? is it still human? I'm not sure.

 

There needs to be a bit more than that. If it has consciousness, is my idea. How do you test it? Well.. that's.. a different (harder) question.

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I don't think "feels human" is the only rule, though. If we program it to "feel human" but have nothing other than that, then what? is it still human? I'm not sure.

 

There needs to be a bit more than that. If it has consciousness, is my idea. How do you test it? Well.. that's.. a different (harder) question.

 

Can unconscious things feel?

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Sure. Feeling is a reaction, too.

 

There are comatose patients who respond to pain. They "feel", they're not conscious.

 

Blegh. Too many fuzzy terms and concepts. If I remember, I'll come back tomorrow and make it more concrete.

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Yeah, it's always about definitions with these things, that's the point. What is life? What is consciousness? How do we figure out if something is conscious or if it is alive? Or if it's conscious enough to be close-enough to a human being to "earn" rights?

 

All about definitions. I suspect we'll ahve to deal with a whole lot of it in the upcoming years as our AI systems get closer and closer to the real deal. We're not there yet, but we probably will at some point.

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The questions seems to be, "What do you mean by treat as human?"

 

 

Does that mean we "perceive" them as human?

Does that mean we give them jobs and try to prevent them from dating our daughters?

Does that mean they vote and get to hold seats of power?

Does that mean they can declare their superiority over all other lifeforms and pollute the shit out of our planet since god told them it was okay?

 

My inclination is that you are referring specifically to rights... such as those inalienable ones with which we're all endowed. TBH, I have a hard time wrapping my head around what that would even mean when applied to a non-reproducing, non-organic machine.

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TBH, I have a hard time wrapping my head around what that would even mean when applied to a non-reproducing, non-organic machine.

 

Surely if we could build them, it is possible that they could build themselves.

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without a common frame of reference and this case definition as to what constitutes "human" in an agreeable way to all, there can be no argument/answer or debate, only futility.

Well, we're going to have to start somewhere.

 

The viability of AI systems is a known fact... we all know it's coming, it's just not here at the moment. We're not there yet, but we're VERY VERY LIKELY to get there.

 

Those are things we should consider morally, imho.

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No. Human is a strict biological classification, homo sapiens. Australopithecus afarensis and homo erectus might share certain characteristics of a human, but they're not human. Same with your hypothetical machine. I would call it humanoid at best.

 

But as others have said, these are definitions. It's the philosophical implication of these definitions that interests us. Even though the machine is not homo sapiens, it's still something of special interest.

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  • 7 months later...

Because machine is machine. It can't be human ever.

 

If there will be really such condition still there will be many differences in machine and human like:

 

Machine can't grow

Machine can't reproduce

 

But human can...

 

So machine must fulfill these conditions too before we call it a human or a living body.

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Because machine is machine. It can't be human ever.

 

If there will be really such condition still there will be many differences in machine and human like:

 

Machine can't grow

Machine can't reproduce

 

But human can...

 

So machine must fulfill these conditions too before we call it a human or a living body.

 

So suppose you made a machine that did those things? I know it's not impossible, because such things already exist: us.

 

But whether something is technically "human" is, I think, beside the point. The question is whether it's a person.

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  • 1 month later...
Is there more to that thought?

 

If you are able to understand every single biochemical process that defines a 'cow', then somehow you can recreate these trillions of processes in a lab, then you are lucky enough to be able to amplify this recreation so that it can be mass produced...on and on.

 

I'm wondering, would you call that a cow? Or just a sophisticated chemical recreation? What if we could do the same with humans?

 

Is life only constituted of organic matter? What is organic? Well it usually means there is carbon involved. Can real life only be made of carbon?

 

What if I use something different? Like silicon?

 

Is that not life?

 

There, that's the rest of my thought. :D

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Hmm..I just had a weird thought...

 

Synthetic-Cows..

 

Hmm, I just had a weird thought...

 

Implant some wetwear into a human...

 

Allow it to have AI. Allow the electromechanical features to change upon AI alterations (the AI understands the host needs to survive). See if the AI takes over the host's brain, actions, and mind. The parasite becomes the dominant member of the body.

 

Hmm...

 

Anyway, if Motoko Kusanagi existed, I'd date her before the hat reached the ground. Personhood? Blah. I suspect I would be satisfied with dating her. I would think she'd have enough programming to make her seem really close to a human if not exactly the same. Sure, I'll call her a person if she wants.

 

Actually, I've had this idea running around my head: Evolution of silicon based organisms.

Given the chance, perhaps they would become what we call electronic, robotic, and the such.

Such a possibility is almost unreal, yet feasible.

 

As such, I could consider any AI system that can continue to learn, adapt, and know how to express emotion similar to a human. The emphasis is on it learning. I suspect it would need some form of sociobiology programming in order to find ways to relate to a human society. In other words, not running a mile and taking the bus instead... some form of civility basis.

 

I think an interesting aspect of Ghost in the Shell is that the owners actually switch out bodies from younger versions to older versions. Thus, allowing them to "grow old."

 

I'm also curious about what kind of neural darwinism can occur within a person to allow evolution of brain material without destroying the person. Perhaps, given the person an ability to be immortal, the person's brain changes to become more electronic. Of course, the DNA isn't wired to have Silicon, I think. I believe some algae can have silicon in their bodies. Possibly by studying the various evolutionary mechanics behind those and emphasizing them within neural tissue evolution along with a feasible continuance of mental processes, then a person could be allowed a basis for neural darwinism into a more sophisticated robot-like, computer-like state with a refined computer-like brain.

 

Carbon offers itself as quite an insulator and resistor. Given the ability to use other materials in the brain and the nervous system, I suspect that the wiring and transmission of data would be much faster.

Edited by Genecks
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