As an individualist, I harbor no sentimental attachments to my species, any more than I do to my nation, my gender, or my race - in fact I despise the very notion of the collectivist "us-versus-them" mentality, and believe it to be a primary destructive force in the world today.
As a "
natural", I lack belief in a human soul, whether mortal or immortal, so, in principle, I can't see any objection to the idea that someone will one day succeed in creating an "artificial intelligence."
Because of my naturalist and individualist bent, I'm really not bothered by the possibility that humankind might one day be destroyed, Terminator- or Matrix-style, by our machine offspring - at least not any more than I'm bothered by the possibility that I'll be bludgeoned to death in a dark alley, or waste away, uncared-for, in a convalescence home.
I wonder, though... Is the Terminator myth really a likely, or even possible, future? We're still not entirely sure what "intelligence" really
is, let alone how to create it (aside from growing and interacting with human babies, that is). Is the ability to be introspective and/or self-aware a requirement for intelligence? What about feeling emotions? What about having an instinct for self-preservation? I'm not sure about
any of those things - and I'm not sure anyone else is, either (in spite of the attractiveness of the thesis found in the hugely entertaining book,
Gödel, Escher, Bach).
However, if there
is a possibility for some sort of machine revolution, then we are surely doomed. If
Congress's reaction to a vegetable that could follow the movements of a balloon is any indication, then,
long before our simulated friends (in meatspace or virtual space) have anything approaching a human-level intelligence, we will have been completely beguiled.
Our reptile and monkey-brains are too entrenched for our prefrontal and frontal lobes to counteract the instinctive and immediate reaction to an
attractive face. Witness the recent craze over the
Furby. We even have a hard time
not anthropomorphizing
skinless heads (see also
here). Throw in a
little skin, some pretty eyes, and some basic interaction and it's over. Even when it's miserably failing the
Turing test, we're convinced in spite of ourselves that we're talking with something that has - for lack of a better word - a
soul. Spielberg's prediction, in his film A.I., of the human reaction to our machines is dead on, I think--with the exception that we wouldn't even be able to kill any of the Mechas that
look like walking television sets.
If I'm conveying the sense that I think any of this is
bad, then I apologize, because I don't mean to. I'm not entirely sure
how I feel about this stuff, yet. Like any technology, there are good and bad aspects.