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Cui Bono Robo Sapiens

Alois Knoll

Year
2002
Citations
4

Abstract

Ever since Czech writer Karel Capek’s well-known play “R.U.R. – Rossum’s universal robots” [Capek], first published in 1920 and performed in 1921, man-made robots of human-like shape have inspired fiction writers to envision worlds with artificial creatures far superior to human beings – either in friendly coexistence or taking over by eliminating their creators and leaving them behind as an ephemeral step in the evolution of life on earth. Roboticists and AI researchers, by contrast, have come to realise that there is still a long way to go if only parts of such visions are to come true. Almost every aspect of research on humanoid robotics that has been touched on across scientific communities has taken researchers to the edge of current technology. Moreover, it has also become obvious how limited our knowledge about ourselves is when it comes to implanting those skills into a mechanical body that are neces-sary to enable a robot to mimic basic aspects of human intelligence. However, due to recent developments in enabling technologies [Brooks] (processing power, mechatronics, walking machines, articulated vision heads and more) and also due to findings and developments in other fields (e.g. studies of the human brain, linguistics, psychology), we currently observe a shift in the view of what artificial intelligence is and how it can be put to work in operational

Keywords

Homo sapiensSociologyAnthropology

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