(May 26, 2019 at 3:37 pm)wyzas Wrote:(May 26, 2019 at 3:24 pm)BrianSoddingBoru4 Wrote: I recently reread Carl Sagan's essay 'In Defense Of Robots', in which he makes his usually eloquent case for the unmanned exploration of space, among other things.
In the essay, he stresses the point that unmanned space vehicles will necessarily have to become more intelligent if they are to remain the best option for this type of work. But he stops short of at what seems (to me, at least) to be a vitally important question: At what point does machine intelligence make it unethical to use spacebots for suicide missions?
Since Sagan wrote the piece in the late 1970s and even since his death almost a quarter century ago, machine intelligence has grown tremendously. The self-awareness/sentience of computers appears to be a matter of not 'if', but 'when'. Do we have any ethical justification for sending a machine of even rudimentary self-awareness to, say, Venus (where it will almost certainly be fried) or Jupiter (where it will almost certainly be crushed)?
I know that in the earliest days of space exploration dogs and chimps were used as test subjects and no one minded all that much. But there is a feeling about animal 'rights' today that did not exist even a generation ago. Might not the same be eventually true of machines?
Boru
Once the bot's know it's a suicide mission and tell us they don't want to go. Until then, it's just a mission, HAL.
Side note: Just watched a vid where a dog owner died(recently) and her will stipulated that her pet dog be cremated and placed/planted with her. They followed the will, dogs are still considered property. I'm not sure that we have advanced as much as people like to think.
Here is the story (not what I watched): http://vt.co/news/us/healthy-dog-is-euth...ead-owner/
But would the machine even have the right to refuse the mission? We're in the habit of compelling human beings to perform dangerous, life-threatening tasks, under threat of imprisonment if they refuse to comply.
Boru
‘I can’t be having with this.’ - Esmeralda Weatherwax