I mean couldn't the government just... ban robots?
Removing the need for relaxation/stress though, I wouldn't. You can give up parts of your humanity without losing it entirely, the things that aren't broken don't necessarily need replacing - Like Love/Happiness/Loyalty. I would be strongly opposed to any hyper edgy twat that was willing to remove those things from their personality in favour of clinical logic.
We got to the top of the food chain throwing spears around, god damn it.
not for some fucking future hippies to protest rights for. We make robots like you see in the movies, and we're screwed.
Quote from: Meta Cognition on September 23, 2014, 04:53:19 PMI'd rather live in techno-socialist society than our current one>can't tell if real meta or not
I'd rather live in techno-socialist society than our current one
That isn't my point. My point is we can prosper without compromising our humanity. Becoming cyborgs is not what we need to do. Nothing is inevitable. I, personally, would fight until my dying breath to stop something like this from happening. Machines don't deserve rights. I don't care how sentient it is. They're tools.
If privacy is maintained in communal housing just as if it were private, then it probably couldn't be too bad. But I'm really not all that interested in having people walk in on me taking a shit.And free love... *shivers in fear*
You have to look at the long run. Doing something now that may not seems like it changes anything could result in a huge change over the years.
Machines don't deserve rights. I don't care how sentient it is. They're tools.
Quote from: Meta Cognition on September 23, 2014, 05:10:45 PMQuote from: challengerX on September 23, 2014, 05:09:26 PMYou have to look at the long run. Doing something now that may not seems like it changes anything could result in a huge change over the years.I suppose it depends on your perception of it. It seems like a worthwhile trade-off to mine eyes.Some things aren't. What's the point of anything if we aren't us anymore?
Quote from: challengerX on September 23, 2014, 05:09:26 PMYou have to look at the long run. Doing something now that may not seems like it changes anything could result in a huge change over the years.I suppose it depends on your perception of it. It seems like a worthwhile trade-off to mine eyes.
Quote from: Meta Cognition on September 23, 2014, 05:05:22 PMQuote from: challengerX on September 23, 2014, 05:04:14 PMThat isn't my point. My point is we can prosper without compromising our humanity. Becoming cyborgs is not what we need to do. Nothing is inevitable. I, personally, would fight until my dying breath to stop something like this from happening. Machines don't deserve rights. I don't care how sentient it is. They're tools.I'd argue it isn't at all compromising one's humanity. Directed, self-imposed evolution? It's practically godhood.The only problem I see is that robots would never do more than what they're programmed to do, even if they're fully capable. Unless they're programmed to self-defend, like humans are programmed to, they're not going to evolve themselves on their own accord.
Quote from: challengerX on September 23, 2014, 05:04:14 PMThat isn't my point. My point is we can prosper without compromising our humanity. Becoming cyborgs is not what we need to do. Nothing is inevitable. I, personally, would fight until my dying breath to stop something like this from happening. Machines don't deserve rights. I don't care how sentient it is. They're tools.I'd argue it isn't at all compromising one's humanity. Directed, self-imposed evolution? It's practically godhood.
But there's programming behind that. Why would any programmer give a robot the function to defend itself? Self defense if the only real reason why it would bother to evolve itself. I can understand a robot that's programmed to adapt to the ever-changing stock market, but that's different from evolving to where it'll protect itself from a human trying to deactivate it.
Where it is does not matter. How our brains process information matters.
Quote from: Meta Cognition on September 23, 2014, 02:37:21 PMQuote from: challengerX on September 23, 2014, 02:35:42 PMThere's nothing we can do short of destroying the robots and factories.Fuck that. I want my super-abundance.Fuck robots. Hasn't anybody read Asimov? The man knows what he's talking about. He's a prophet I tell you. A PROPHEEEEEEEEEEEEEET
Quote from: challengerX on September 23, 2014, 02:35:42 PMThere's nothing we can do short of destroying the robots and factories.Fuck that. I want my super-abundance.
There's nothing we can do short of destroying the robots and factories.
Yep. My money's on revolution.
Quote from: Statefarm on September 24, 2014, 06:11:33 AMYep. My money's on revolution.That's a bit of a leap.