I, Robot on the
other hand proved the problem of Robots actually being dangerous and taking
over. People became so reliant on the technology that they lost sight of life
without it. What the fascinating aspect
of it was to me as well is that it was set in 2035, nearly only 20 years from
now.
Humans in most segments of the world are so reliant on the
use of technology to perform simple daily tasks. From waking up, to reminders, to
communications, the addiction to technology human beings have now could
certainly lead to sole independence on future advancements in upgrading
technology. Including Robots or OS systems that seem so real that even the
viewers get attached.
In The Most Human,
Human, Brian Christian recalls an experiment where people have to
communicate with a computer and eventually it has to guess who that person is. This
concept of gathering information to expand that software is the same thing
Samantha successfully accomplishes in Her. She gains emotions, executes them, and can
pull any information from the Internet in less than a nana second. Samantha’s “brain” is limitless. I place
quotes around brain because realistically she doesn’t have a natural brain,
which makes me ask does having this certain large muscle in our skull possibly
have a limit to learning?
Now, as well in I,
Robot, their bodies do not have brains.
Unlike Samantha they can actually physically affect the human race. Eventually they do by the end of the movie
until Will Smith comes in and saves the day.
These robots make life and death decisions not based on morals (because they
lack them) but based of statistical analysis in certain scenarios.
How could the human race continue without morals, the
knowing from right and wrong, not what scientific reasoning will succeed. Once the robots develop and start multiplying
in our world, what good can they really do besides turn us into liabilities?
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