yego.me
💡 Stop wasting time. Read Youtube instead of watch. Download Chrome Extension

Why are we really afraid of robots? | Ken MacLeod | Big Think


3m read
·Nov 3, 2024

KEN MACLEOD: There's so much unrealized potential in science fiction. It asks the most profound questions. We were there at the airship and the airplane and the atomic bomb, and we're still with you. We are in the beginnings of what's being called the fourth industrial revolution, and the application of AI to many, many areas that go beyond routine clerical work. But even a fully-automated world is not beyond having to make hard choices. Science fiction can help us to look at the social consequences, to understand the technologies that are beginning to change our lives.

My name is Ken MacLeod. I'm a science fiction writer. Science fiction has always acted as a metaphor for the mundane, to get across these ideas and consequences to the public in engaging ways. In the age of aviation, science fiction was all about space ships. In the age when the internet has become part of everyday life, a lot of science fiction became about a singularity.

JOAQUIN PHOENIX: Do you have a name?

SCARLETT JOHANSSON: Samantha.

MACLEOD: Science fiction, for me, was this adventure playground for different social and political ideas. In Kim Stanley Robinson's "Red Mars," he has a comment: "They fancied themselves apolitical technicians and naturally as a result, were complete putty in the hands of their political masters." And that is the great danger of being a technologist, thinking that you're not affected by politics.

DR. FRANKENSTEIN: Now I know what it feels like to be God.

MACLEOD: The robot in the modern sense, unquestionably begins with "Rossum's Universal Robots," written by Karel Čapek in Prague in 1919. The very word robot derives from the Czech word for laborer, particularly a forced laborer. It very clearly establishes the trope of robots as entities that could revolt against their human masters. The first World War had just been brought to an end by the Russian Revolution of 1917 and the German Revolution of November 1918. The imagery of both workers uprisings and slave uprisings is very present in that play. The robots send out an international manifesto, for example.

In the 1930s and '40s, Asimov's invention of the Three Laws of Robotics civilized the idea of the robot as an image of a worker. Robots in science fiction exist as metaphors for anxieties about labor, about class struggle, about intelligence itself. They have very little to do with the actual machine that will, for example, builds cars on the production line. The problem with that is that the science fiction version of the robot is of very little help at all in understanding what the real problems and the real opportunities actually are.

To take a simple example from the military field, if we worry about the Terminator, we'll never be asking the proper ethical questions about autonomous killer robots. The issue raised in "Frankenstein" is not so much, "Is the creation dangerous," as, "Are we worthy to create it?" And this issue arises very profoundly when we are creating systems onto which we project intelligence. Autonomous killer robots, they're a very bad idea who's time has come, but none of these developments are inevitable. They're all the consequences of human actions, and we can always step back and say, "Do we really want to do this?"

Science fiction inspired scores, hundreds, perhaps thousands of people to study, to become engineers, but it really is very important every so often to look up from your work and ask, "Who am I doing this for?"

More Articles

View All
The Fall of Empires | World History | Khan Academy
Steve: “What are we doing here? Hey, sell, we’re going to look at this question of why do Empires fall. For those of you who don’t know, Steve Shrer, he is a world history fellow here at Khan Academy, and also a former world history teacher. So, what we …
Executive and legislative disagreements with the Supreme Court | Khan Academy
In many videos already, we have talked about our three branches of government in the United States. But what we’re going to do in this video is focus a little bit more on the judicial branch. As we’ve talked about, the judicial branch’s main goal is to be…
Article I of the Constitution | US Government and Politics | Khan Academy
Hey, this is Kim from Khan Academy, and today I’m learning about Article One of the U.S. Constitution. Article One is jam-packed with information about how our government is supposed to work. But principally, what it does is create the legislative branch …
Crashing Into Saturn: This Cassini Mission Is the Most Epic Yet | Short Film Showcase
Alone, Explorer on a mission to reveal the grandeur of Saturn, its rings and [Music] moons. After 20 years in space, NASA’s Cassini spacecraft is running out of fuel. And so, to protect the moon of Saturn that could have conditions suitable for life, a sp…
After Decades of Brownface, South Asians Fight for Better Representation | National Geographic
Mainstream media has characterized how we see South Asians, whether by romanticizing its biggest country, India, or asserting the model minority stereotype. But it’s not okay, and today South Asian actors and comedians are pushing back. South Asia is mad…
A Gun Seizure at Miami International Airport | To Catch a Smuggler
[music playing] OFFICER HERNANDEZ: We’re going to have to take this back to the office. Yeah. That box will not be going to its final destination. I appreciate you carrying the heavy stuff. OFFICER HERNANDEZ: So when it comes to firearms in particular, …