In the name of Allah the Merciful

Robot Souls: Programming in Humanity

Eve Poole, B0BX9LMP4R, 1032426624, 1032432853, 1000918718, 978-1000918717, 9781000918717, 9781032432854, 978-1-032-43285-4, 978-1032432854, 978-1-032-42662-4, 978-1032426624, 9781032426624, 978-1-003-36661-4, 9781003366614, 978-1003366614

10 $

English | 2024 | PDF | 3 MB | 185 Pages

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Two  of the biggest design problems in Artificial Intelligence are how to  build robots that behave in line with human values and how to stop them  ever going rogue. One under-explored solution to these alignment and  control problems might be to examine how these are already addressed in  the design of humans.

Looking closely at the human  blueprint, it contains a suite of capacities that are so clumsy they  have generally been kept away from AI. It was assumed that robots with  features like emotions and intuition, that made mistakes and looked for  meaning and purpose, would not work as well as robots without this kind  of code. But on considering why all these irrational properties are  there, it seems that they emerge from the source code of soul. Because  it is actually this ‘junk’ code that makes us human and promotes the  kind of reciprocal altruism that keeps humanity alive and thriving.

Robot Souls looks at developments in AI and reviews the emergence of ideas of  consciousness and the soul. It places our ‘junk code’ in this context  and argues that it is time to foreground that code, and to use it to  look again at how we are programming AI.