He just wanted a copy of his son.what do you mean?
He just wanted a copy of his son.what do you mean?
Scary? The only thing I find scary is the removal of human choice in a machine process. Beyond that, while not for me I won't fear mind transfer unless forced.Again, at a given point it’s hard to say what’s real and what now.
The interesting thing (I seem to remember that you find it scary) is that this will be a question we’ll have to ask ourselves in the real world in a few decades, with the coming of mind transfer into machines.
That's...not the same thing. Though, I will clarify. In an automatic transmission there was human engineering and processing in the timing. What I see people wanting is machines to make up their own minds on things and let technology go wherever it might go. Now that if that is a misunderstanding of expectations then perhaps I misunderstand. But, that's my impression.So...you find automatic transmission scary?
More skeptical than anything else. It sounds completely ridiculous to my limited understanding. But, as long as a human is involved, and there is ability to make choice as to what the machine does I'm less anxious. When I read futurology posts its always like "humans won't have to do X" when it comes to machine development. Which, OK, fair enough, but it limits the value for my part. Doesn't inspire me.So what we’re doing with neural networks then, with machines that have to be *trained* and don’t have a program that was written by a human beforehand?
And? As I said, I would prefer the involvement of choice, something which is not always identified as part of this process from what I occasionally read. You keep choice inside there and that's fine. You eliminate that and I have concerns. Which is usually what I see is that I'd rather have a machine do it because I don't want to and am apathetic towards the process of how it gets done. That sort of laziness makes me more concerned.And there are many tasks that right now we HAVE to do that most people would gladly have a machine do instead (and many wealthy individuals pay someone else to do).
Choice in the process of how technology develops. Not choice in terms of whether or not I use it, thought that is also a concern.But there is choice: you can chose to do wash your clothes yourself or have a washing machine and concentrate on some other thing. You can chose to learn how to fix the washing machine yourself if it breaks or pay someone else to do it and concentrate on other things.
I’m a musician and you work in psychology, we wouldn’t have these options if we couldn’t chose to have someone else find food for us.
I'm wondering what Q's reaction to Picard will be now that he is an android. Wasn't his fascination with him the fact that he was human? I'm not really a fan of what they did to Picard in the season finale and I'm hoping Q will turn him back into a human. How can Picard still be on trial for the crimes of humanity when he no longer is human?
I'm guessing it won't even be addressed,I'm wondering what Q's reaction to Picard will be now that he is an android. Wasn't his fascination with him the fact that he was human? I'm not really a fan of what they did to Picard in the season finale and I'm hoping Q will turn him back into a human. How can Picard still be on trial for the crimes of humanity when he no longer is human?
Question: In Jean-Luc’s previous interactions with Q, he’s often served as humanity’s advocate. How does that change now that Jean-Luc is an android?
Sir P: [chuckles] Yes, I think this android element is really irritating.
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