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Can a robot love?

lawtonfogle

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Could a robot love?

Ok, not talking about the ones today, but soon there will be quantum computers, and with that, we could make robots with human brain compacities. Now, will a robot that has a fully simulated inteligence have emotions, will it be able to love?

My own oppinion is this. If love is just some chemical process, then yes a robot can love. But don't let my idea stop you, post your own.

(the sad part is this sounds like some part of a sci-fi movie, when in truth we could be facing it soon)
 

Exist

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"I don't think that robots can ever be concious as a consequence of the manner in which they operate."

If you don't think things are aware because of the way they were built, then what makes us aware? What makes dogs more aware than jellyfish, but less aware than us?

And why is it that only things with "brains" are aware (rocks and plants aren't aware)?

You don't think the brain has anything to do with awareness?
 
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MoonlessNight

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Exist said:
"I don't think that robots can ever be concious as a consequence of the manner in which they operate."

If you don't think things are aware because of the way they were built, then what makes us aware? What makes dogs more aware than jellyfish, but less aware than us?

And why is it that only things with "brains" are aware (rocks and plants aren't aware)?

You don't think the brain has anything to do with awareness?
I don't know exactly what makes us aware but this doesn't bother me because there are still many mysteries about how human beings operate. I suspect that it has something to do with our ability to directly access abstract concepts, but I don't have a scientific explanation for it.

However, the only part of robots that we are interested in is their computer "brains" so we can think of a robot as essentially a computer program. A computer program is essentially just a list of algorithms that the program will follow, sometimes giving output or rearranging data. Every program can be broken down into these things, so this is all that a robot would be able to do, though it would have quite complex algorithms.

But the problem is that human thinking cannot be broken down into algorithms, no matter how complex they are. There are a variety of ways to see this. Searle's chinese room thought experiment shows (intuitively, it is by no means a proof) that a one can create a program so complex that it appears that it is thinking, but in actuality there is no understanding within the computer but rather just a blind obedience to a rule book.

Then we have the mathematical arguments, which Penrose has really jumped on. There tend to be two main arguments, and they are related. One works heavily on the incompleteness theorem and it basically boils down to algorithmic systems will have certain statements that they can never determine the truth of, or they will have statements that can be true or false for them (essentially the law of noncontradiction is void for them). This leads to two conclusions:
1.) Human's accomplishments in math show that we are not bound by the incompleteness theorem, therefore we do not think in the algorithmic manner of robots.
2.) Human reason is flawed; forget the law of noncontradiction, we can't even know anything.
Most people choose option 1.

The other argument is related, but I think it is more easily accesible and more powerful. It is based off the halting problem. What is that? Well imagine that you wanted a computer to prove an existence theorem based off the natural numbers. If a number of the type you are interested in exists you could have it check one than two than three etc. until it finds it. But if that number does not exist you will have a problem because it will never find one (it will never halt). So the only thing that really matters for the existence proof is whether the algorithm that searches the natural numbers will halt or not. So what we need is another algorithm that checks whether a given algorithm will exist. The problem? It can be proven that that algorithm is impossible to construct. So computers have a problem here, as they will not be able to figure out whether any given algorithm halts, though it will be possible for a human to figure this out. So again, however we think, it seems like it isn't in the same way that computers operate.

But I suppose the thing that interests me is, why would you think that we work like robots in the first place? Why would you think that robots have the ability to think? Almost every argument that I've heard boils down to an argument from ignorance, i.e. we don't know that robots can't think so therefore they think. If it's so clear to you, shouldn't there be a better argument?
 
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Casstranquility

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lawtonfogle said:
Could a robot love?

Ok, not talking about the ones today, but soon there will be quantum computers, and with that, we could make robots with human brain compacities. Now, will a robot that has a fully simulated inteligence have emotions, will it be able to love?

I think robots will be able to simulate love, but never love as living beings. Although they will be made up of energy, I truly doubt that man could tap the potential for real intelligence and real emotion that is buried within that energy.
 
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Exist

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"If it's so clear to you, shouldn't there be a better argument?"

It's not so clear to me. It's my best guess that someday, humans will be able to create Awareness (not just AA, but real awareness).

See, you're talking about computers that exist today. I agree, the computer I'm typing on is not aware. Awareness will probably never be created through a PC's computer program.

But I believe that our material realm is like a computer program. There are variables, then there are rules. Determinants, and the laws of nature. There are no trascendant/supernatural influences.

If you had complete knowledge of a brain, and reconstructed every detail of it (so that it would have the exact same chemical processes and electric currents)...well, I don't see what would make that creation's "intellect" any different from us, except what it is made of.
 
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Doppelganger

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lawtonfogle said:
Could a robot love?

Ok, not talking about the ones today, but soon there will be quantum computers, and with that, we could make robots with human brain compacities. Now, will a robot that has a fully simulated inteligence have emotions, will it be able to love?

My own oppinion is this. If love is just some chemical process, then yes a robot can love. But don't let my idea stop you, post your own.

(the sad part is this sounds like some part of a sci-fi movie, when in truth we could be facing it soon)

I guess it would depend on the robot. If you're looking at a machine like what was featured in I-Robot, then no. It is a machine that is trying to replicate something that there is no definitive process for. What I consider love may be completely different from what you consider love. Not to mention the fact that a robot is incapable of feeling an emotion. They may have sensors in their synthetic skin that will tell them, when they hurt themselves and to feel "pain." But that is taken from a human response. That kind of robot would still lack the necessary energy that makes us special. Whether you want to refer to it as the soul, the life force, I believe that it is what drives our emotions.

Now, if you're going something along the lines of a Cyborg model. e.g. the human Cylons from Battlestar Gallactica, they're basically human clones genetically adapted for perfection. However, they also contain the electronics necessary for them to transfer their data to another model in the event of their destruction or when they require assistance. In regards to whether they would feel true emotions, that is hard to say. For all intents and purposes, they would be a "human." However, I believe they would also lack the true inner energy that humans posess. In regards to that type of robot, it is hard to say.
 
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MoonlessNight

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See, you're talking about computers that exist today. I agree, the computer I'm typing on is not aware. Awareness will probably never be created through a PC's computer program.

Every one of those arguments relies only upon idealized computer programming. It doesn't matter if the program is made today or a hundred years from now, as long as it is programmed in the same basic way that every single program ever made has been.

It would take a major revolution in computing for me to even consider the possibility of a robot being concious. Programs would have to run in a completely different way than they do now; indeed, you probably wouldn't be able to call them programs, they'd be so different.

Of course it could be a possiblity with a different type of computing (one that probably couldn't be computing, as it'd involve much more than mere computation). But that hasn't even been dreamed of to my knowledge. So I don't touch that area of the discussion, there's just too many unknowns.

If you had complete knowledge of a brain, and reconstructed every detail of it (so that it would have the exact same chemical processes and electric currents)...well, I don't see what would make that creation's "intellect" any different from us, except what it is made of.

But would it be a computer? That's the key question. I don't think it would be.
 
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MoonlessNight

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Exist said:
...

We were talking about robots. But even then, I think the terms don't matter. It is a piece of machinary designed and built by humans.
Not making a distinction between two things that work in completely different ways imakes conversation impossible. If it's anything that humans might conceivably invent at any time we might as well just throw magic into the discussion, and once we do that it's nearly impossible to argue that anything is impossible to do.
 
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MoonlessNight

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Exist said:
Well, if you want to get this way about it, then we were talking about robots, throughout the whole convo.

Robots.
Well then, give me a good definition of robot to work with. You've mentioned something that I wouldn't consider a robot in a discussion of robotics, so obviously we need a better definition.
 
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Exist

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ro·bot
n.
1. A mechanical device that sometimes resembles a human and is capable of performing a variety of often complex human tasks on command or by being programmed in advance.

The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fourth Edition
Copyright © 2000 by Houghton Mifflin Company.
Published by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.


Works for me.



According to standard usage (from my experience), it's a mechanical device, usually electronic, that serves some function.

Does that work for you?
 
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MoonlessNight

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Exist said:
Works for me.



According to standard usage (from my experience), it's a mechanical device, usually electronic, that serves some function.

Does that work for you?
That is an incredibly vague definition that doesn't line up with either the professional or common definition of robots. Under that definition a power drill would be a robot.

I would define robots as an autonomous device which can be reprogrammed to perform a multitude of tasks. For the purposes of our discussion I would also like to say that including a computer, even if it is an extremely primitive one, is part of the definition.
 
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C

Code-Monkey

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lawtonfogle said:
Could a robot love?

Ultimately a robot has to be programmed and everything it does is forced by it's programmer/creator. We simply don't have the capability of giving a computer "free will" and the ability to love or not love. We can get pretty sophisticated with some of our programming, but when it gets down to it, the computer is acting very much like a puppet. So if you put your sock puppet on your hand and open and close your hand while saying the words, "I love you".. if you consider that to be the puppet expressing love, then yes I think you could say a computer can love. Although we don't need to wait for the future.

ILoveYou.java
----------------------
public class ILoveYou
{
public static void main(String[] args)
{
System.out.println("I love you!");
}
}

There ya go. A robot that loves. Frankly I find the idea of real love to be an impossibility as long as their is no spiritual component to the being. The closest I think we'll ever get to a robot loving someone is if the person undergoes something like Anakin Skywalker did... and by this I mean if his legs get replaced by robotic legs and his arms get replaced by robotic arms, and he has a pace-maker and lots of other gadgets built into him. At some point you might suggest there's more machine than there is human.

Speaking of this... I'm actually surprised there isn't some big evolution of consciousness type project going on where programs can evolve millions of times a day, people can try to interact with them, and as the programs evolve the ones that seem to communicate fairly well with people survive and the ones that don't stop running. That would be pretty interesting.
 
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LVdesigns

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I think a robot, with a brain and senses which replicate that of humans, could love. However, I wouldn't see the point in creating such a robot other than to prove it was possible. Additionally, this type of technology probably won't be possible for a long time. It would have to be able to register touch, smell, emotional reponses from others, tone of voice, etc. and be able to combine this 'data' in such a way that it registers as love. We could certainly teach a robot to mimic being in love, but creating one that would develop feelings of love on its own would be a lot more difficult.
 
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