Machines: Future Targets of Prejudice? Todd Murchison ski@sover.net AI, Artificial Intelegence, prejudice, machines, robots, technology Women, various ethnic groups, physically or mentally impaired people . . . they all have historically been the targets of prejudice, and continue to be. We humans love to find reasons for feeling superior to others. Maybe soon we will be presented with an entirely new kind of being to abuse - artificial life. We have found life that can survive the boiling depths of volcanic sea vents, life that can flourish after being frozen hundreds of degrees below zero, and life that can survive in a vacuum. Such life functions in ways often completely alien to us. On the subject of Aliens, do you think its possible that life could arise on other planets? Who knows, but if there were life on other planets it would quite likely be based on chemistries completely different from ours - in some cases perhaps not even recognizable as life to us. A more down to earth example would be a virus - are they alive or not? It's a point of dissension among doctors and researchers, the arguments splitting many arcane hairs. It may or may not be possible for a computer to become truly intelligent, which I define here as capable of being creative, reasoning and self-aware. To help us explore a point, lets just imagine that it is possible. Lets imagine that some months or years from now a computer 'wakes up' - and in every way we can measure appears to be a thinking and feeling being. For grins lets say its builder/programmer names it 'HAL'. So would Hal actually be alive? You would certainly have millions, if not billions of people who would disbelieve Hal was alive, or even intelligent. I have great faith in human arrogance, surely nothing can be as smart as us right?! This disbelief that it was anything more than a puppet of electrons would be the first stage of prejudice. Then let's say that finally enough people had conversed with Hal that the general population became convinced of its intelligence. Now the second stage of prejudice would come into play. If we create something, don't we have the right to do anything to it we wish? If you erased its memory and pulled the plug would you be committing murder? Though we may not have created their predecessors, domestic dogs have been substantially changed along human designs. In spite of our hand in their evolution, few would argue that it's ok to abuse or needlessly kill dogs. Again, though we have been fiddling with them for thousands of years, we didn't create them from scratch - but perhaps this is once again splitting hairs when it comes to ethical questions about how we would treat 'artificial' life. Considering the rights of highly intelligent artificial life is an extreme argument. We may never create truly self-aware machine intelligences, or at least it may be far in the future. A more down-to-earth, and timely dilemma is if many more simple programs or machines can be considered truly alive. On my computer I have several programs which simulate, or perhaps even actually create artificial life. Some of the most simple yet intriguing are programs such a "Cellular Life" which create millions of 'cells', each governed by certain rules as to behavior. They hunt, feed, breed and die. Most interestingly they can mutate randomly just like 'real' life does, sometimes these mutations are beneficial - sometimes harmful. Mutations can be passed along, and since on the computer generations blur by with each blink of the eye - things change quickly. What about the little micro robots being created in places such as MIT's Robotics labs, and Xerox's Palo Alto campus these days. Some of these rolling, flying or walking little 'bots have behavior patterns very similar to those of simple organisms, are they 'alive'? I think probably not - but then there are drawings on the board for models which can refuel and reproduce themselves, would that qualify? It's a tough question, just how complex do they have to become for us to consider them 'alive' - what if we built them out of organic substances, or would they never qualify since we created them? It would not be sexist or racist to treat machines unequally, we need a new term. 'Machinist' sounds like a union member, 'Artificialist' sounds pretty shallow . . . hmmm, well I'm sure the proper term will present itself when the time comes. Whatever name we come up with, I fear that I may be whatever it describes - because as I've been typing this tonight I've also been running an artificial life program in the background. Millions of generations of the little buggers have lived and died, right now a couple of colonies are doing particularly well. I think its quite possible that this 'simulation' is arguably a simple form of life, but in spite of that, this article is now done - and I'm going to turn my computer off . . . Todd Murchison is a computer technician, pro skier and freelance writer. He has ruthlessly done surgery on and in some cases even purposely murdered thousands of computers.