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#16
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Re: Do robots have feelings?
I'll consider a robot to be living when it won't let me turn it off.
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#17
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Re: Do robots have feelings?
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#18
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Re: Do robots have feelings?
Once a robot can reproduce then it will be living. LOL.
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#19
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Re: Do robots have feelings?
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As far as sparksandtabs post on adaptation... that is a tough one. Now, if I understand evolution correctly, animals naturally do not adapt to their environment. Instead, an animal is born with a genetic mutation that allows it to survive in a new area. This animal out-lives and out-reproduces all the other "normal" gened animals, eventually becoming the predominant gene type. So now this ties in with the topic of robotic reproduction. Going back to the PID example, would a robot with the better PID tuning not out-live the other robots, with an inferior tuning? This robot will recognize that it does not need to change that aspect of itself, and pass that aspect down to it's children. The children will then find an unsatisfactory aspect of it's programming, fix it and pass it down to their children, so on and so forth. This post may be confusing and unorganized, but it's hard to organize thoughts like this ![]() Last edited by Mike : 01-01-2006 at 19:10. |
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#20
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Re: Do robots have feelings?
Our DNA contains duplicate (redundant) information, which allows reproduction to take place with error detection and correction.
An engineering equivalent is flight control systems, which have 3 or 4 copies of each unit, that constantly cross check each other. If one is found to be operating differently than the rest then it is locked out by the others. Thats error detection. Error correction (fixing the failed component in real time) would be a little more complex. Our bodies fix themselves without our conscious involvement or awareness. Our blood clots to stop leaks, then our skin, muscle and bones repair themselves from the basic elements present in our blood (from the food we have eaten). A robotic equivalent would be a fluid that contains iron, aluminum, copper, semiconductors... and nanotechnology that is able to detect when part of the robot has failed or been damaged, and pulls the needed molecules from that fluid, and rebuilds the damaged component molecule by molecule. Thats the kind of self repair you would need to approach robotic life. |
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#21
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Re: Do robots have feelings?
well theres those new plastics with "self repair". sumthing about catalysts in them. i forgot
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#22
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Re: Do robots have feelings?
[a little off topic] A very cool program that replicates selection in a population is gene pool. I let it run a few days once, and the swimbots that came out were amazingly well developed.
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#23
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Re: Do robots have feelings?
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#24
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Re: Do robots have feelings?
When a robot army comes marching in to force us into body pods put us ina virtual world and lets call this the matrix for some random reason and in the matrix some dude can dodge bullets comes and talks to the machines while being blind...Then i will believe robots are alive.
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