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‘Consciousness’ in Robots Was Once Taboo. Now It’s the Last Word

5 pointsby antiviralover 2 years ago

3 comments

antiviralover 2 years ago
&quot;This sort of built-in adaptability, Dr. Lipson argued, would become more important as we became more reliant on machines. Robots were being used for surgical procedures, food manufacturing and transportation; the applications for machines seemed pretty much endless, and any error in their functioning, as they became more integrated with our lives, could spell disaster. “We’re literally going to surrender our life to a robot,” he said. “You want these machines to be resilient.<p>One way to do this was to take inspiration from nature. Animals, and particularly humans, are good at adapting to changes. This ability might be a result of millions of years of evolution, as resilience in response to injury and changing environments typically increases the chances that an animal will survive and reproduce. Dr. Lipson wondered whether he could replicate this kind of natural selection in his code, creating a generalizable form of intelligence that could learn about its body and function no matter what that body looked like, and no matter what that function was.&quot;
tgvover 2 years ago
Next moonshot? What corporate sycophant writes such drivel? It&#x27;s more like the next Doomsday device. Don&#x27;t give your robot or AI feelings, don&#x27;t give them emotion, and don&#x27;t make them self-aware.
antiviralover 2 years ago
<a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;archive.ph&#x2F;QOfER" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;archive.ph&#x2F;QOfER</a>