It's been a weekend in bed with movies. Thanks to the technology, I've finally caught up with some movies I wanted to watch for a long time. One movie though, I went to the cinema for. I, Robot was released here in Australia last Thursday. The film, if you haven't seen it, is based loosely on the ideas and concepts of Isaac Asimov. If you want to know more about Asimov go to http://www.asimovonline.com" title="http://www.asimovonline.com" target="_blank"http://www.asimovonline.com Asimov is one of those writers among a few, that has always inspired me. Growing up in small town Germany, books were my favourite past time, and science fiction was the escape from reality you needed. I flew to the stars with Mark Brandis, brought peace to the universe with Perry Rhodan, went into cybersleep with Buck Rodgers and defeated the evil Ming with Flash Gordon. Who could forget HAL in the 2001 series by AC Clarke. And I met the aliens in Carl Sagan's Contact. I still believe that Jodie Foster is brilliant in that movie, but the book is a lot better. More than all of those, I became fascinated with the concepts of intelligence, self awareness and artificial life. If you've seen AI, you should have a small glimpse into the philosophy of robotic life. Asimov was the first writer to portray robots as positive, as self aware individuals who would contribute to society. Many writers built on this concept. I guess, in the early 21st century one of the questions we have is the question of life itself. What makes a human a human, what makes a life a life, and at what point do we melt into each other. Going a step back. When you look at science and the industrial revolution you will notice that over the last few decades things become multifunctional. Originally, a Printer was just that: A printer. It would produce pages. A copier would take those pages and copy it. These days you have a copier that connects to a computer and becomes a printer, in many cases a fax machine and scanner as well. Phones started as devices to make calls. These days your phoneline carries data to and from other computers and networks us to the world. In many cases we don't even need the physical copper wire anymore. We can connect wirelessly. Our cellphones have turned into PDAs, that we can connect to the internet to play games and exchange data. Give humanity another 10 years or so, and I'm sure, most of us will have organisers that are wirelessly connected to the internet at all times, making it possible to schedule appointments with your doctor or the teacher of your children by typing a bit of data into your handheld. Your hifi system at home, that used to play vinyl and tapes quite sufficiently (and how nerdy were you, if you had a genuine diamond needle on your turntable?), now has to stream Dolby7.1 digital streams into groups of speakers. It has to be able to process WMAs and MP3s, make your DVDs look good and record your favourite TV program onto DVDs, if possible sans ads. Humanity is going the same way. The approach comes from two directions. Direction one is from the human point. More and more of our body parts can be replaced by artificial limbs. Legs, arms, eyes, ears, teeth, bones, the heart, nerves... almost everything can be replaced. It won't be long and we will be able to replace brain tissue and maybe a full brain. So, in the extreme, a human who's every physical part has been replaced... what makes him the human that he is? Self awareness? Intelligence? memories? The other direction is what they broadly call Artificial Intelligence. Imagine a computer that can think. Most computers have a certain degree of AI already. They can check your spelling and auto correct it. They can adjust the brightness of the digits on your alarm clock when it's dark. They can switch your microwave on for exactly the right time to reheat your dinner from last night. Some can even give half way intelligent answers when you probe them. Go one step beyond that. What happens when a computer can make "conscious" decisions? Sure, it depends on the input, but so do humans. We put an umbrella over our heads when it rains. Our skin senses the rain, and commands our arms to take out the umbrella unfold it and shield us from the rain. A machine could do that. In fact, we can build machines that can mimic most human behaviour, but as yet have no will of their own. Isn't that the difference? Free will? So, think back of the original scenario, with the human who has been entirely replaced with artificial body parts. If we could transplant his consciousness into a machine... wouldn't he be the same thing? AC Clarke wrote a really good book called Richter 10. In it he explores the mind of the main character, who is a seismologist hunting earthquakes. In the end of the book, the main character dies, but his consciousness is transferred into a computer and then into an android that looks like him, and in it he lives forever. Isn't that the dream that keeps us all going? The dream that one day we can live forever? Every Christian will tell you that they are in it for the long haul. Life on Earth matters little when you have eternal life in heaven to look forward to. And why are we so hooked up on eternal life? Isn't it because we are afraid of death? The one thing we can't escape from? No money in the world will prevent you from dying, no medicines, no cures. We all die. What if we could preserve our essence and put it into something else? I, Robot is just a speck on the screen and it (unfortunately) hardly touches on the subject, instead focussing on the big blockbuster special effects. It is a great movie, but it doesn't make you think too hard. Read the book instead. It will. |