You would think so, but it was pretty well suggested that the EMH was not only designed with Zimmerman appearance, but pretty much his personality (or lack there of one) too.
Very valid points, PKTrekGirl. It was rather funny that the Doc lacked a bedside manner, and one might rationalize that he lacked them because he was only designed for use in triage scenarios, but one would have thought he would have modified his subroutines to become a little less... irksome. At least, someone should have brought it up.
What if somebody else had the control over your parameters?
What if somebody else had the control over your parameters?
That's far too fine a line for me. Humans are ultimately always changing as well, and they change in response to external stimuli. "Reprogramming" is an important characteristic of our existence; if we lacked the power to change, we'd IMHO be more like machines, not less.
I've never seen this episode, but I've heard that if you look closely, sparks shoot out of him when he's shot, implying mirror-Vic is an android instead of a hologram.Wasn't there some guy in one of the Mirror eps (I'm thinking 'Emperor's New Cloak) that looked like holo-Vic but was a real person?
The human brain can be modified at will, though, if you can just get through someone's head and gain access to it. The brain is basically a biological computer. It can be modified by chemical means. LSD rewires the brain, crisscrossing signals, which is why sights can have smells, sounds have sights, etc. Drugs can modify behavior and emotions. Every time someone takes an antidepressant or is shot up with a "truth serum", the properties of the brain are being altered, if only temporarily. Electroshock therapy uses an electrical shock to change how the brain works. Physical surgery can change someone's personality entirely in the case of a lobotomy. Scientists are even developing ways to interface the brain with machines- how will we be able to reprogram the brain when we fully develop that?Very valid points, PKTrekGirl. It was rather funny that the Doc lacked a bedside manner, and one might rationalize that he lacked them because he was only designed for use in triage scenarios, but one would have thought he would have modified his subroutines to become a little less... irksome. At least, someone should have brought it up.
I am not sure. If you are able to modify the parameters of the personnality of an artificial being at will, then I'd say that this being don't have sentience. It is merely a piece of software that is self-aware, but it's still your piece of software to be changed and modified at your convenience.
The only way I would consider an artificial being to be sentient is if we couldn't change his personality post-creation outside of its own personnal experiences. You cannot re-program it, or you end up with merely another being. If Data was tampered to be more friendly, he wouldn't be Data anymore.
It is a fine, but definite line to draw. A program that can change behavior easily will never grow to be an actual sentient artificial being. If you could change at will your favourite food, or what kind of girls you find attractive, how could you define yourself? The moment you change these parameters, you become somebody else that isn't you. And that somebody else might have a different idea about what he wants to like/dislike that he doesn't.
What if somebody else had the control over your parameters?
The human brain can be modified at will, though, if you can just get through someone's head and gain access to it. The brain is basically a biological computer. It can be modified by chemical means. LSD rewires the brain, crisscrossing signals, which is why sights can have smells, sounds have sights, etc. Drugs can modify behavior and emotions. Every time someone takes an antidepressant or is shot up with a "truth serum", the properties of the brain are being altered, if only temporarily. Electroshock therapy uses an electrical shock to change how the brain works. Physical surgery can change someone's personality entirely in the case of a lobotomy. Scientists are even developing ways to interface the brain with machines- how will we be able to reprogram the brain when we fully develop that?
By virtue of the human brain being basically a computer, albeit a complex one, we are just as alterable as an android or hologram. The difference is that it's a hell of a lot easier to do it to a hologram, because we know how to get at the code, and the code is of our own invention, not nature's, so we understand it.
I've never seen this episode, but I've heard that if you look closely, sparks shoot out of him when he's shot, implying mirror-Vic is an android instead of a hologram.Wasn't there some guy in one of the Mirror eps (I'm thinking 'Emperor's New Cloak) that looked like holo-Vic but was a real person?
The human brain can be modified at will, though, if you can just get through someone's head and gain access to it. The brain is basically a biological computer. It can be modified by chemical means. LSD rewires the brain, crisscrossing signals, which is why sights can have smells, sounds have sights, etc. Drugs can modify behavior and emotions. Every time someone takes an antidepressant or is shot up with a "truth serum", the properties of the brain are being altered, if only temporarily. Electroshock therapy uses an electrical shock to change how the brain works. Physical surgery can change someone's personality entirely in the case of a lobotomy. Scientists are even developing ways to interface the brain with machines- how will we be able to reprogram the brain when we fully develop that?
By virtue of the human brain being basically a computer, albeit a complex one, we are just as alterable as an android or hologram. The difference is that it's a hell of a lot easier to do it to a hologram, because we know how to get at the code, and the code is of our own invention, not nature's, so we understand it.
That is the main conflict in my theory, isn't it? Well, about the current means of changing one's way of being, I have to say I doubt that we have the means to change someone permanently. LSD, serums, etc... those are merely temporary affects (except addiction syndroms, off course), and even permanent scarings like lobotomy are uncontrolled.
For the moment, we cannot effectively control how one's man think and react. And.. when you think about it, the moment we will be able to permanently change how peoples think, what they like, what they want, we will be loosing free will over our lives. Oh.. damn it. Does free will equal sentience? Does sentience equals free will?
What is the relation between those two...?
"My first officer was the victim of a drive-by rapping!"Please state the nature of the musical emergency!
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