Robots

(neato! – promoted by buhdydharma )

What do we know about robots?

Well, generally they are powered by either beer, the hopes and dreams of their captive humans or a desire to kill/help Sarah Connor.

They come in peace.  

Or to destroy us.

The only language they understand is binary.

If you hear a robot proclaim:

01001100 01101111 01101110 01100111 00100000 01101100 01101001 01110110 01100101 00100000 01110100 01101000 01100101 00100000 01110010 01100101 01110011 01101001 01110011 01110100 01100001 01101110 01100011 01100101 00100001

Respond with:

01010010 01101111 01100010 01101111 01110100 00100001 00100000 00100000 01001001 00100000 01100001 01101101 00100000 01101111 01101110 00100000 01111001 01101111 01110101 01110010 00100000 01110011 01101001 01100100 01100101 00101110

Surely this will prevent your new robot overlords from killing you and ensure your spot on the newly formed Human Council.

Oh wait……

wrong blog.

Sorry, let me start again.

So what role to robots really play in our future?

Well, so far we know that humans are trying to communicate with robots through dance.

And that the robots are trying to communicate with humans through dance.

Sometimes we dance together with the help of computers and magic.

Robots are being “taught” to mimic and understand humans while humans try to interact with and understand robots.

The most impressive development in my mind is a robot that can understand humor.  

Although to our credit it only really understands at the level of knock knock jokes and it’s “favorite” joke is:

Mother to boy: “Johnny, you’ve been working in the garden a lot this summer.”

Boy: “I know. My teacher told me to weed a lot.”

Ummm…..yeah.  

Robots won’t be stand up comedians any time soon, but the mere fact that this has been developed is astounding.

“Notice that the boy says the teacher told him to WEED. Since ‘weed’ sounds similar to ‘read,’ the program can find this wordplay,” Taylor says.

Taylor’s task was to “train” the computer with information relative to American English at a child’s level.

“The ability to appreciate humor is an enormous increment in subtlety,” says Professor Tom Mantei, a fellow researcher in UC’s College of Engineering. “You need to know a lot to ‘get’ humor – a computer does not find it easy.”

The advancements in artificial intelligence and the mathematical algorithms associated with developments such as these are more philosophical in nature, and some have been around for quite a long time.


Turing machines are extremely basic abstract symbol-manipulating devices which, despite their simplicity, can be adapted to simulate the logic of any computer that could possibly be constructed.

They were described in 1936 by Alan Turing.

Though they were intended to be technically feasible, Turing machines were not meant to be a practical computing technology, but a thought experiment about the limits of mechanical computation; thus they were not actually constructed. Studying their abstract properties yields many insights into computer science and complexity theory.

In regards to artificial intelligence, the Turing test was proposed in 1950.  It is still being discussed to this day.


The Turing test is a proposal for a test of a machine’s capability to demonstrate intelligence.

Described by Alan Turing in the 1950 paper “Computing machinery and intelligence,” it proceeds as follows: a human judge engages in a natural language conversation with one human and one machine, each of which try to appear human; if the judge cannot reliably tell which is which, then the machine is said to pass the test.

In order to keep the test setting simple and universal (to explicitly test the linguistic capability of the machine instead of its ability to render words into audio), the conversation is usually limited to a text-only channel such as a teletype machine as Turing suggested or, more recently, IRC or instant messaging.



* If you’re interested, the Oracle and the Architect in The Matrix are basically personifications of Alan Turing’s machine.  The Oracle would be the Oracle machine, and the Architect would be the Turing machine itself.

In a recent study it was found that children will treat robots as a peer, rather than a toy.


Scientists conducted 45 study sessions with the robot over five months. By the end of the study the children were treating the robot like a friend rather than a toy.

Some children cried when the robot fell over and tried helping it to stand up, even when told by their teachers to leave it alone. Others covered it with a blanket and said “night-night” when it lay down to sleep…  

I’m not at all surprised by the results of this study, but it does illustrate the state we are in regarding robots integrating into society.  Right now the programs respond and interact at a very elementary level, and the ones most accepting of this reality are children.  

I guess the next step up would be teenagers (hopefully it’s nothing like my halcyon days or we are in some deep shit….)

There is a really great special from CNN’s Future Summit that has a wide panel of experts discussing the social, economical and philosophical implications of integrating robots into human society.

Anthropologist Daniela Cerqui’s views on the future of robotics in the panel discussion were very interesting.  

She also points out that in a way humans are the only species to be actively working on their own extinction.

I’m not sure if I would use the term “extinction”.  I prefer evolution.  

In either case we are essentially playing God in our desire to understand the complexities of life through science.  

Science is often viewed as the opposite of religion.  I’ve personally never been able to separate the two.  It’s the same search, you’re just traveling on different paths to get there.

I guess I chose the science path when I found out as a kid (incidentally during a church service about the creation) that believing in the Bible and accepting dinosaurs as real were not mutually exclusive.  I knew dinosaurs were real.  My parents even agreed.

And right there in the middle of a church I lost my faith.  It all seemed so empty.  I found no joy in singing the next hymn.  It was a sad day for me looking back at it.  

It had been so comforting to know that someone had all the answers, even if I would never know them while on this Earth.

I’ve always enjoyed Einstein’s views on religion and science even though I tend to lean to the more spiritual side. (Then again, he didn’t particularly like quantum physics because of his religious views and on some level I share his concerns)  

“It is quite clear to me that the religious paradise of youth, which was thus lost, was a first attempt to free myself from the chains of the ‘merely personal,’ from an existence dominated by wishes, hopes, and primitive feelings.

Out yonder there was this huge world, which exists independently of us human beings and which stands before us like a great, eternal riddle, at least partially accessible to our inspection and thinking.

The contemplation of this world beckoned as a liberation, and I soon noticed that many a man whom I had learned to esteem and to admire had found inner freedom and security in its pursuit”.

I had a friend recently ask my opinion on why God did not kill Adam and Eve for eating the apple in the Garden of Eden, like he promised he would.  They disobeyed his supreme command despite the knowledge of death and were allowed to live.

Maybe he was testing whether his creation had free will.

Turns out they did, so the world was adjusted accordingly.

God created man in his image.  We are creating robots in our image.

One day maybe it will be necessary to test our own creation’s free will.

The philosophy is gone from the academic teaching of science (if it was ever really there to begin with) and I can not understand why.  I’m still very surprised that ethics and philosophy classes are not required for a degree.  It seems like important topics to cover considering the implications.

Nuclear bombs were discovered before nuclear reactors.

A series of chain reactions causing huge explosions?

Not impressive.

Controlling that explosion and harnessing it’s energy.

Impressive.

Yeah…an ethics class would have been nice….

On a side note if in the future you ever have to fight a robot you can always use your human powers and ask this simple question:

How come?

14 Students allowed back in Morton West

Crossposted at DailyKos

The Superintendant of Morton West High School District has allowed 14 students to return to classes today. The others will be allowed to return on Friday. No students will be expelled.

Rita Maniotis, President of the PTO said that it is “wonderful news” and that “it’s not like our kids are walking away with nothing.” Especially since most of the students have served most of their suspension time. At least they will not be up for expulsion hearings which would have occurred in December.

A victory for “Freedom of Speech”!

Both the ACLU and Operation Push were involved in this action by the J. Sterling Morton High School District. And cooler heads have prevailed.

   

“No matter how one viewed the incident … none of what happened really merited an expulsion,” spokesman Ed Yohnka said.

The Chicago Tribune has an article here:Trib

      Sorry about the link, it looks as if you have to register to access it.

Taken into perspective, the District experienced a gun threat about 2 weeks ago in which the Superintendent refused to “lock down” the school because the student who witnessed the displaying of the gun in a washroom was a “Special Ed student” and, therefore, not credible. While students who demonstrate peacefully in the student cafeteria by refusing to go to classes are such a threat that there is a lockdown!

Although the “Special Ed student” proved to be correct and the suspected student did actually have a gun two days later, no apology was given. (SOP in the world of Education.) No lockers had been searched but the suspected/actual perpetrator confessed to bringing a gun into the school.

Students expressing their right to free speech (in a Republican controlled community)are more dangerous than a gun in the school.

It is interesting that Cicero and Berwyn are Republican considering their demographics and income level, but, then, Cicero has a long history of intolerance and prejudice as the era of Civil Rights marches and protests once proved. Although Hispanics and Black do reside in the community now, the people in control are all from that era which explains the controversy at Morton West.

J.Sterling Morton High School District #201 is a large district comprising of an East Campus, a West Campus, and a Freshman Center. The student population is about 8,000 students and predominantly Hispanic. The Administration of the school and the School Board are predominantly white and from Cicero.

In fairness to the School District here is the opinion of the Superintendent:

   

“Some with political agendas have tried to cloud the matter with politically charged appeals about policies over which this district has no authority,” Nowakowski said in the statement. “It is unfortunate that they would seek to use children to advance their political agendas. The fact is that Morton students are encouraged to think for themselves and to express their views, whatever those views may be.”

and Dan Proft, the District spokesman and the spokesman for the Town of Cicero who also coaches Little League there and who is a regular Republican pundit with regular commentaries on the local radio station(WLS) and on Bruce DuMont’s “Beyond the Beltway” program:

   

Punishments had to be given on an individual basis because some students were more disruptive than others, he said. Those penalties ranged from 5-day suspensions to 10-day suspensions.

Although a teacher at the school said “there was no disruption” to the classes except that which occurred by the lockdown.

I am glad that “Freedom of Speech” has had this victory in the Public School system of Cicero and Berwyn. However, I do think that with the present Repblican leaning and influence in the two communities, this type of problem will occur again.

To read my other diary on this topic at the big orange : here

in Other news…

Welcome to a weekly roundup of news related to the gay, lesbian, bisexual, transgendered, and otherwise “other” community.

  • Civil Unions are not equal to Marriage.  That’s the finding of a recent commission on New Jersey’s attempt to give same-sex couples full and equal partnership under the law while appeasing those who cringe at the expansion of the word “marriage”.  From a New York Times editorial:

    It is hardly a surprise that New Jersey’s civil union law is not working very well. During the past several weeks, dozens of same-sex couples have testified that the law has not provided the equal benefits that were promised when it passed.

    Now, the special commission that heard the testimony has made it official: the civil union law has been a “failure.” Frank Vespa-Papaleo, who is chairman of the commission as well as the state’s director of civil rights, said the law is not as effective “as if the word ‘marriage’ were used.”

    I don’t know if I’d call it a resounding “failure” if only a few private employers are dodging the law (most couples will still get benefits, and the state recognizes them as full and equal), but there’s no doubt that separate-but-equal status will always encourage dissenters to focus on the “separate” instead of the “equal”.

  • Speaking of which, laws that specifically invoke “married couples” are often cynical ways of passing anti-gay legislation without having to wear one’s bigotry on one’s sleeve.  Throw in an extra phrase like “for the good of the children”, and you have toxic legislation like the Arkansas ballot initiative to outlaw adoption and foster parenting … except for married couples.  It’s for the good of the children, of course.  (n/t Mombian)  A nice touch: the Arkansas News Bureau calls it what it is: a gay adoption ban.
  • Terrance at the Republic of T has dedicated this round of installments of his excellent Hate Crimes Project to anti-trans violence.  Today’s focuses on the murder of Thalia Mosqueda, a trans woman whose murderer argued that he was disgusted by her alleged advances because “he wasn’t gay”:

    Panic is a strange thing. We know all about “gay panic,” but what about “trans panic,” which seems to be at the root of so many anti-trans hate crimes like the murders of Bella Evangelista, Emonie Spaulding, Ukea Davis & Stephanie Thomas, and Nireah Johnson, just to name a few?

    Well-worth reading the whole series.

  • Whatever may be happening in the federal push for non-discrimination legislation, some city governments are aligning behind inclusive policies: Minneapolis passed a resolution to lobby their federal representatives to support the inclusive version of ENDA, while activists in Scottsdale are pushing for local law with protections “based on a host of factors, including sexual orientation, physical characteristics, and gender identity and expression.”  Oddly enough, five federal congressmen from New York City refused to vote for the non-inclusive ENDA, something even their own state does not have.
  • HRC is reporting that the House and Senate are currently hashing out the Department of Defense budget – with an attached rider making hate crimes legislation into federal law.  Unsurprisingly, the president is likely to veto this spending bill, but not for protecting teh gay: it contains provisions for troop withdrawal from Iraq.

    Also from HRC: honor the troops discharged under DODT.  How’s this for an unlikely coalition:

    HRC will partnering with with the Servicemembers United (formerly Call to Duty), Log Cabin Republicans, Servicemembers Legal Defense Network and Liberty Education Forum, to host a three-day tribute, “12,000 Flags for 12,000 Patriots,” on the National Mall to recognize the 12,000 men and women kicked-out of the military since the signing of “Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell.” One flag, 12,000 in all, will be placed on the Mall for every discharged service member.

  • Italian activist and father of his nation’s gay rights movement Massimo Consoli passed away last week at the age of 61.  Check out this article by Doug Ireland, outlining Consoli’s long, admirable, and influential life.

Not LGBT-related, but one of my favorite concert performances evah:

I won’t be around to take comments until much later tonight, but thanks for reading in the meantime!

in Other news…

Welcome to a weekly roundup of news related to the gay, lesbian, bisexual, transgendered, and otherwise “other” community.

  • Civil Unions are not equal to Marriage.  That’s the finding of a recent commission on New Jersey’s attempt to give same-sex couples full and equal partnership under the law while appeasing those who cringe at the expansion of the word “marriage”.  From a New York Times editorial:

    It is hardly a surprise that New Jersey’s civil union law is not working very well. During the past several weeks, dozens of same-sex couples have testified that the law has not provided the equal benefits that were promised when it passed.

    Now, the special commission that heard the testimony has made it official: the civil union law has been a “failure.” Frank Vespa-Papaleo, who is chairman of the commission as well as the state’s director of civil rights, said the law is not as effective “as if the word ‘marriage’ were used.”

    I don’t know if I’d call it a resounding “failure” if only a few private employers are dodging the law (most couples will still get benefits, and the state recognizes them as full and equal), but there’s no doubt that separate-but-equal status will always encourage dissenters to focus on the “separate” instead of the “equal”.

  • Speaking of which, laws that specifically invoke “married couples” are often cynical ways of passing anti-gay legislation without having to wear one’s bigotry on one’s sleeve.  Throw in an extra phrase like “for the good of the children”, and you have toxic legislation like the Arkansas ballot initiative to outlaw adoption and foster parenting … except for married couples.  It’s for the good of the children, of course.  (n/t Mombian)  A nice touch: the Arkansas News Bureau calls it what it is: a gay adoption ban.
  • Terrance at the Republic of T has dedicated this round of installments of his excellent Hate Crimes Project to anti-trans violence.  Today’s focuses on the murder of Thalia Mosqueda, a trans woman whose murderer argued that he was disgusted by her alleged advances because “he wasn’t gay”:

    Panic is a strange thing. We know all about “gay panic,” but what about “trans panic,” which seems to be at the root of so many anti-trans hate crimes like the murders of Bella Evangelista, Emonie Spaulding, Ukea Davis & Stephanie Thomas, and Nireah Johnson, just to name a few?

    Well-worth reading the whole series.

  • Whatever may be happening in the federal push for non-discrimination legislation, some city governments are aligning behind inclusive policies: Minneapolis passed a resolution to lobby their federal representatives to support the inclusive version of ENDA, while activists in Scottsdale are pushing for local law with protections “based on a host of factors, including sexual orientation, physical characteristics, and gender identity and expression.”  Oddly enough, five federal congressmen from New York City refused to vote for the non-inclusive ENDA, something even their own state does not have.
  • HRC is reporting that the House and Senate are currently hashing out the Department of Defense budget – with an attached rider making hate crimes legislation into federal law.  Unsurprisingly, the president is likely to veto this spending bill, but not for protecting teh gay: it contains provisions for troop withdrawal from Iraq.

    Also from HRC: honor the troops discharged under DODT.  How’s this for an unlikely coalition:

    HRC will partnering with with the Servicemembers United (formerly Call to Duty), Log Cabin Republicans, Servicemembers Legal Defense Network and Liberty Education Forum, to host a three-day tribute, “12,000 Flags for 12,000 Patriots,” on the National Mall to recognize the 12,000 men and women kicked-out of the military since the signing of “Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell.” One flag, 12,000 in all, will be placed on the Mall for every discharged service member.

  • Italian activist and father of his nation’s gay rights movement Massimo Consoli passed away last week at the age of 61.  Check out this article by Doug Ireland, outlining Consoli’s long, admirable, and influential life.

Not LGBT-related, but one of my favorite concert performances evah:

I won’t be around to take comments until much later tonight, but thanks for reading in the meantime!

“Tonight’s Silly Question…..”