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Let there be light

Yes
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No
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Total Members Voted: 15

Can Robots Ever Become Life?

Coomer | Mythic Inconceivable!
 
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Of course

There is nothing special about an organic brain that cannot be replicated by a sufficiently advanced synthetic one.

Emotions, Desires, Thoughts, Fears are all a result of internal and external 'programming', either in the form of your biology (genetics/hormonal levels) or your learning.

If you make a program that can learn new things, you are already on par with most organic life. If you make a program that can rationalise a decision, you've surpassed all non-sentient life. If you make a robot that can do all that and have laser eyes, we have no need for meatbags anymore.

I disagree

How can "programming" account for hopes and dreams, aspiration, regret, motivation, and seemingly useless emotions and customs that we have
We have grown from cave dwelling creatures to civilized humans

And if you say we are just beings with programs too, evolution dictates that we are here to eat and fuck
So where has culture and art come from

Why do we choose to choose to be monogamous instead of polygamous like our programming dictates 
And why do we go against our programming to stay with our mate when we feel attraction to other people
Why do we make such unproductive choices?
Why do things that we know are bad for us and that we shouldn't do?

There is something inherent there


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Is robot "life" just following algorithms or is there something inherently there?
I mean, this is the same question I was answering. I'd say human minds are literally just following instructions, and that there's nothing particularly special about us other than the complexity of our brains. So I don't see why a sufficiently advanced robot, as far-fetched as that might be, couldn't be conscious in the same way.


Coomer | Mythic Inconceivable!
 
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How would we know that the robot actually feels things like love and pain and joy and isn't just secretly plotting a hostile takeover of the world behind a well maintained facade?

tfw loli bot doesn't mean it when she says I love you


Coomer | Mythic Inconceivable!
 
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Is robot "life" just following algorithms or is there something inherently there?
I mean, this is the same question I was answering. I'd say human minds are literally just following instructions, and that there's nothing particularly special about us other than the complexity of our brains. So I don't see why a sufficiently advanced robot, as far-fetched as that might be, couldn't be conscious in the same way.

What instructions are we following exactly because if you look at our evolutionary growth, we have not been sticking to one set of instructions


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Is robot "life" just following algorithms or is there something inherently there?
I mean, this is the same question I was answering. I'd say human minds are literally just following instructions, and that there's nothing particularly special about us other than the complexity of our brains. So I don't see why a sufficiently advanced robot, as far-fetched as that might be, couldn't be conscious in the same way.
What instructions are we following exactly because if you look at our evolutionary growth, we have not been sticking to one set of instructions
What does this have to do with anything?


 
 
Mr. Psychologist
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<.<
If you make a program that can learn new things, you are already on par with most organic life. If you make a program that can rationalise a decision, you've surpassed all non-sentient life. If you make a robot that can do all that and have laser eyes, we have no need for meatbags anymore.
So why, if it was even possible, do people want this to happen? Create a race of thinking, sentient machines with survival instinct, who can outperform humans physically and intellectually, and set them loose into the world? Might as well just blow up everything.
So that we can wipe out the disgusting plague of organic life and replace it with a nice pure race of machines.

Humans exist solely to create the singularity of self-replicating synthetic life. After that we can either digitise to a higher plane of existence or we must die to make way for a better form of un-life.


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How can "programming" account for hopes and dreams, aspiration, regret, motivation, and seemingly useless emotions and customs that we have
None of those emotions or thoughts are useless and have a purpose that benefits the growth of our species. Customs develop due to societal differences, and I don't see why you're even bringing that up, it doesn't really serve a purpose in this discussion.
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So where has culture and art come from
See above. Art is just a way humans occupy our time and entertain ourselves.
Quote
Why do we choose to choose to be monogamous instead of polygamous like our programming dictates
And why do we go against our programming to stay with our mate when we feel attraction to other people
Why do we make such unproductive choices?
Why do things that we know are bad for us and that we shouldn't do?
Culture and societal norms.
Quote
There is something inherent there
You're making human behavior more fanciful than it actually is in this context.


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"With the first link, the chain is forged. The first speech censured, the first thought forbidden, the first freedom denied, chains us all irrevocably."
β€”Judge Aaron Satie
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If you make a program that can learn new things, you are already on par with most organic life. If you make a program that can rationalise a decision, you've surpassed all non-sentient life. If you make a robot that can do all that and have laser eyes, we have no need for meatbags anymore.
So why, if it was even possible, do people want this to happen? Create a race of thinking, sentient machines with survival instinct, who can outperform humans physically and intellectually, and set them loose into the world? Might as well just blow up everything.
So that we can wipe out the disgusting plague of organic life and replace it with a nice pure race of machines.

Humans exist solely to create the singularity of self-replicating synthetic life. After that we can either digitise to a higher plane of existence or we must die to make way for a better form of un-life.
If you're just talking about net value, then getting rid of humans via an atomic blast would be more beneficial then replacing them with an identical race that can suffer, feel pain, and all that. It would serve nothing.


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Culture and societal norms.

And these norms exist because we were programmed to reproduce and pass on our genetic material?

And if so, we do we no longer value these instincts today?
Last Edit: May 26, 2016, 05:02:01 PM by IngloriousWho98


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Culture and societal norms.
And these norms exist because we were programmed to reproduce and pass on our genetic material?
That's not really what I said. Those things develop because humans gathered and began interacting with each other in unique ways, in different locations, under different influences, facing different dangers, and overcoming different struggles. You can get wildly different cultures by jumbling the things humans have to deal with, as you can see with today's world.


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Culture and societal norms.
And these norms exist because we were programmed to reproduce and pass on our genetic material?
That's not really what I said. Those things develop because humans gathered and began interacting with each other in unique ways, in different locations, under different influences, facing different dangers, and overcoming different struggles. You can get wildly different cultures by jumbling the things humans have to deal with, as you can see with today's world.

No but you're saying this comes from our "programming"
Which implies that we were preloaded with ways to react to certain situations
So how did these "struggles" change from surviving long enough to reproduce to worrying about turning in that assignment on time


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No but you're saying this comes from our "programming"
Fundamentally, everything does.
Quote
Which implies that we were preloaded with ways to react to certain situations
So how did these "struggles" change from surviving long enough to reproduce to worrying about turning in that assignment on time
Because I was born and put into the school system, then told that I needed to work hard and learn, otherwise my parents would yell at me, I wouldn't get a good job, and I'd be a loser when I grew up. All of those things are worries that strike at the core of how a human would naturally respond to negative stimuli, which is avoidance. So I worked hard, got into a good college, and will probably live a decently successful life as a result.


 
 
Mr. Psychologist
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<.<
If you make a program that can learn new things, you are already on par with most organic life. If you make a program that can rationalise a decision, you've surpassed all non-sentient life. If you make a robot that can do all that and have laser eyes, we have no need for meatbags anymore.
So why, if it was even possible, do people want this to happen? Create a race of thinking, sentient machines with survival instinct, who can outperform humans physically and intellectually, and set them loose into the world? Might as well just blow up everything.
So that we can wipe out the disgusting plague of organic life and replace it with a nice pure race of machines.

Humans exist solely to create the singularity of self-replicating synthetic life. After that we can either digitise to a higher plane of existence or we must die to make way for a better form of un-life.
If you're just talking about net value, then getting rid of humans via an atomic blast would be more beneficial then replacing them with an identical race that can suffer, feel pain, and all that. It would serve nothing.
Life will always find a way, if we wipe ourselves out it simply resets the evolutionary timer.

We are a stage of evolution, here to ensure the progression to the next life-form. If we just get all edgelord and wipe ourselves out, that's a few million years of evolutionary time wasted.

Human life is pointless enough as it is, without further frittering it away on teenage angst.


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Because I was born and put into the school system, then told that I needed to work hard and learn, otherwise my parents would yell at me, I wouldn't get a good job, and I'd be a loser when I grew up. All of those things are worries that strike at the core of how a human would naturally respond to negative stimuli, which is avoidance. So I worked hard, got into a good college, and will probably live a decently successful life as a result.

And why do they say that
Why does society value things that go directly against our evolutionary instict

In short
Where has this change come from?


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Why does society value things that go directly against our evolutionary instict
Firstly, I don't know what "Instinct" you're implying all of this stuff goes against. Second, even if it were to go against a ton of "Natural instinct," we no longer have to exclusively act on that instinct because we've developed a complex enough society and collective intelligence to realize that not everything in nature is ideal. We've come to understand we can improve on things through rationalization and logic, things that nature doesn't always cater to.


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Why does society value things that go directly against our evolutionary instict
Firstly, I don't know what "Instinct" you're implying all of this stuff goes against. Second, even if it were to go against a ton of "Natural instinct," we no longer have to exclusively act on that instinct because we've developed a complex enough society and collective intelligence to realize that not everything in nature is ideal. We've come to understand we can improve on things through rationalization and logic, things that nature doesn't always cater to.

I'm implying our instincts as animals
That is our "programming" is it not

Quote
We've come to understand we can improve on things through rationalization and logic, things that nature doesn't always cater to.

This right here
You take our ability to grow and change as something that's a given but that's exactly what separates us from robots


 
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This is not the greatest sig in the world, no. This is just a tribute.
How would we know that the robot actually feels things like love and pain and joy and isn't just secretly plotting a hostile takeover of the world behind a well maintained facade?

tfw loli bot doesn't mean it when she says I love you
Yeah but neither does the little girl in my basement, really. She's just got Stockholm syndrome.


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I'm implying our instincts as animals
That is our "programming" is it not
I don't see your point.

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This right here
You take our ability to grow and change as something that's a given but that's exactly what separates us from robots
No it isn't, robots can grow and change to adapt to a situation.


 
 
Mr. Psychologist
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<.<
Of course

There is nothing special about an organic brain that cannot be replicated by a sufficiently advanced synthetic one.

Emotions, Desires, Thoughts, Fears are all a result of internal and external 'programming', either in the form of your biology (genetics/hormonal levels) or your learning.

If you make a program that can learn new things, you are already on par with most organic life. If you make a program that can rationalise a decision, you've surpassed all non-sentient life. If you make a robot that can do all that and have laser eyes, we have no need for meatbags anymore.

I disagree

How can "programming" account for hopes and dreams, aspiration, regret, motivation, and seemingly useless emotions and customs that we have
We have grown from cave dwelling creatures to civilized humans

And if you say we are just beings with programs too, evolution dictates that we are here to eat and fuck
So where has culture and art come from

Why do we choose to choose to be monogamous instead of polygamous like our programming dictates 
And why do we go against our programming to stay with our mate when we feel attraction to other people
Why do we make such unproductive choices?
Why do things that we know are bad for us and that we shouldn't do?

There is something inherent there
https://www.instagram.com/p/BF1C8eEkJjF/


Coomer | Mythic Inconceivable!
 
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No it isn't, robots can grow and change to adapt to a situation.

Unwarranted assumption

And the robots that can "adapt" to situations only adapt to situations because we gave them the information for that situation
There's no growth
They're just regurgitating what was put into them   


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Mr. Psychologist
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<.<


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Unwarranted assumption
This is not an assumption at all.



Quote
And the robots that can "adapt" to situations only adapt to situations because we gave them the information for that situation
There's no growth
They're just regurgitating what was put into them
Sounds like DNA to me.


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Unwarranted assumption
This is not an assumption at all.


Like that said
That robot is stabilizing itself using info we put into it
That's all it can ever do
It can never grow past that programming

It can never cook because it can't learn how to
It doesn't have the programming and can't conceive a cooking program of its own

Quote
Sounds like DNA to me.

To be honest, this is a subject we still lack information on
We'll need more research
Maybe we'll find something that is inherent to us
And if we don't, that raises even more questions
Which I guess proves our humanity even more


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"With the first link, the chain is forged. The first speech censured, the first thought forbidden, the first freedom denied, chains us all irrevocably."
β€”Judge Aaron Satie
β€”β€”Carmen
If you make a program that can learn new things, you are already on par with most organic life. If you make a program that can rationalise a decision, you've surpassed all non-sentient life. If you make a robot that can do all that and have laser eyes, we have no need for meatbags anymore.
So why, if it was even possible, do people want this to happen? Create a race of thinking, sentient machines with survival instinct, who can outperform humans physically and intellectually, and set them loose into the world? Might as well just blow up everything.
So that we can wipe out the disgusting plague of organic life and replace it with a nice pure race of machines.

Humans exist solely to create the singularity of self-replicating synthetic life. After that we can either digitise to a higher plane of existence or we must die to make way for a better form of un-life.
If you're just talking about net value, then getting rid of humans via an atomic blast would be more beneficial then replacing them with an identical race that can suffer, feel pain, and all that. It would serve nothing.
Life will always find a way, if we wipe ourselves out it simply resets the evolutionary timer.

We are a stage of evolution, here to ensure the progression to the next life-form. If we just get all edgelord and wipe ourselves out, that's a few million years of evolutionary time wasted.

Human life is pointless enough as it is, without further frittering it away on teenage angst.
Just write off everything I said as "lol so edgy", nice. The truth is that life, especially intelligent life, is inherently bad. We can't do much to stop the self perpetuating cycle, but that doesn't mean we have to contribute to it.


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Maybe we'll find something that is inherent to us
This is an extremely large assumption. There is nothing that suggests that humans (Or any life) and the way we function is anything but fundamental forces and particles interacting with each other in specific ways to produce our minds. There's no reason to think there's some unknown force at play. I already talked about this whole thing with Verb earlier in the thread, so I won't write it out again.
Quote
Which I guess proves our humanity even more
Like I said, you're making the concept of consciousness more fanciful than it probably is.


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We can't do much to stop the self perpetuating cycle, but that doesn't mean we have to contribute to it.
Actually, you might be able to things to stop the cycle, but that involves the shocking concept of not killing the species off so we can produce a better existence for ourselves and all life in the future. Which is why I think anti-natalism is a misleading philosophy.


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This is an extremely large assumption. There is nothing that suggests that humans (Or any life) and the way we function is anything but fundamental forces and particles interacting with each other in specific ways to produce our minds. There's no reason to think there's some unknown force at play. I already talked about this whole thing with Verb earlier in the thread, so I won't write it out again.

Like I said
We just need more information

Quote
Like I said, you're making the concept of consciousness more fanciful than it probably is.

I think the fact that we would question our very own creator is pretty amazing


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I think the fact that we would question our very own creator is pretty amazing
What the heck are you talking about?


 
 
Mr. Psychologist
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<.<
If you make a program that can learn new things, you are already on par with most organic life. If you make a program that can rationalise a decision, you've surpassed all non-sentient life. If you make a robot that can do all that and have laser eyes, we have no need for meatbags anymore.
So why, if it was even possible, do people want this to happen? Create a race of thinking, sentient machines with survival instinct, who can outperform humans physically and intellectually, and set them loose into the world? Might as well just blow up everything.
So that we can wipe out the disgusting plague of organic life and replace it with a nice pure race of machines.

Humans exist solely to create the singularity of self-replicating synthetic life. After that we can either digitise to a higher plane of existence or we must die to make way for a better form of un-life.
If you're just talking about net value, then getting rid of humans via an atomic blast would be more beneficial then replacing them with an identical race that can suffer, feel pain, and all that. It would serve nothing.
Life will always find a way, if we wipe ourselves out it simply resets the evolutionary timer.

We are a stage of evolution, here to ensure the progression to the next life-form. If we just get all edgelord and wipe ourselves out, that's a few million years of evolutionary time wasted.

Human life is pointless enough as it is, without further frittering it away on teenage angst.
Just write off everything I said as "lol so edgy", nice. The truth is that life, especially intelligent life, is inherently bad. We can't do much to stop the self perpetuating cycle, but that doesn't mean we have to contribute to it.
lol

Kinda proving the point about the edge there teebeeaichfamilio