The
First Church Of Robotics
The news of the day often includes an item
about some development in artificial
intelligence: a machine that smiles, a program
that can predict human tastes in mates or
music, a robot that teaches foreign languages
to children. This constant stream of stories
suggests that machines are becoming smart and
autonomous, a new form of life, and that we
should think of them as fellow creatures
instead of as tools. But such conclusions
aren’t just changing how we think about
computers — they are reshaping the basic
assumptions of our lives in misguided and
ultimately damaging ways. I myself have worked
on projects like machine vision algorithms
that can detect human facial expressions in
order to animate avatars or recognize
individuals. Some would say these too are
examples of A.I., but I would say it is
research on a specific software problem that
shouldn’t be confused with the deeper issues
of intelligence or the nature of personhood.