I agree with what Sandtrap says. But I think I'm in a field of expertise that is never going to be replaced by robots, so I'll be safe.
Not to sound technocist or whatever the correct term would be, I would never trust a robot to perform surgery on me. Maybe an actual adaptable and learning AI, but never a pre-programmed robot.
Quote from: True Velox on September 25, 2014, 08:30:34 AMNot to sound technocist or whatever the correct term would be, I would never trust a robot to perform surgery on me. Maybe an actual adaptable and learning AI, but never a pre-programmed robot.The robot is better than humans.
An AI might be, but a robot is an automaton. They can't adapt to unexpected situations. If something happens while I'm on the surgery table I wouldn't want the robot to continue without a care in the world.
Quote from: True Velox on September 25, 2014, 10:05:50 AMAn AI might be, but a robot is an automaton. They can't adapt to unexpected situations. If something happens while I'm on the surgery table I wouldn't want the robot to continue without a care in the world.Well, it isn't a dichotomy, there's a massive gap between an artificial general intelligence and a mindless drone. The robots we have now, while not AGIs, are exceedingly intelligent. I'm not saying the surgeon robot might be better than humans, I'm fairly confident it already is in the same fashion automated cars are already better than drivers. I'm not sure if Watson - the robot - has actually been put to genuine surgery yet, however, I'm merely stating it is most definitely superior to humans. And when you say artificial intelligence? Watson constitutes an AI.EDIT: Hue, my bad, Watson is a doctor, not a surgeon.
Sure, administrative, sorting and classifying will eventually be done by machines, but not everything. I doubt humanity is ever going to let a machine decide on a case on life or death as a judge would. Or have robots plead in court.Having a robot judge people accused of crimes is the stuff nightmares and horror movies of AI taking over are made of. I sincerely doubt and hope we will ever surrender that to machines, as law so requires that human aspect.
Well, that's different then. As long as it (he? they?) can adapt and learn, and isn't just executing pre-programmed tasks.
I think the main problem would be the human aspect. A machine may be better, smarter and more precise than any surgeon, but it lacks humanity and may make decisions no human doctor would. It may not understand human emotions or needs such as keeping someone alive for the family to say goodbye, or may make very cold and calculated decisions, such as not saving a person because the younger, healthier person next door would be a perfect match for a liver transplant.Not saying I disapprove of a future with robots or AI performing surgeries, but these are things to be taken into account if more and more jobs end up being taken over by machines.
Quote from: Meta Cognition on September 25, 2014, 10:24:38 AMThose considerations aren't "human". Merely ethical. If doctors can operate under a code of ethics, then I don't see why artificial intelligences cannot.Perhaps you are right, although I still feel that certain decisions should be up to humans. Replacing all surgeons with AI that end up being supervised by medical professionals who make the tough calls just seems like a better idea to me.
Those considerations aren't "human". Merely ethical. If doctors can operate under a code of ethics, then I don't see why artificial intelligences cannot.
I feel a few people in this thread don't properly understand the difference between a robot and a true artificial intelligence