Why calling something ‘it’ is the root of our problems. Not AI or robots.
I recently came across this very divisive article from the WSY, appropriately titled “Why We Should Teach Kids to Call the Robot ‘It’”
Robots are not people. I get it. I also get the Hollywood-generated fears of robots and AI taking over the world. But, I also like to think, and if you spend a few brain cycles on humans vs. robots and AI, you rapidly realize the truth.
That the real danger comes from our own thinking and actions.
Any reading-able human, flipping through a history book, will realize what humans are capable of. And it all starts with our thought, which, by the way, is the very tool we use to design AI and robots. So, by fixing our own through, we will fix (and prevent) future AI problems.
What upsets me about the article is its divisive nature.
“We” are the only one deserving, the rest of the world (including animals and plants) are “only it”. Screw them.
I see this very thought process as the #1 root of humankind problems.
Yes, there is.
Of all thinkers, weirdly enough, physicists have come closer to realize the power of thought, and words, in creating, shaping, and guiding our behavior as humans.
Of them, one in particular, legendary physicist David Bohm, has written extensively on how the relationship between language, physics, and how different language choices shape, in turn, our thinking.
Why a physicist?
Well, really simply put, physicists have known for a while that very little can be gleaned about our reality at the micro-scale (from the Planck length all the way to quarks, atoms, and molecules) to the macro-scale (planets, galaxies, and our whole universe) if one thinks of …. things in isolation.
The main avenue to unlock how physics really, really works is studying and characterizing the interactions among elements.
In a sense, realizing that nothing in isolation really has sense, or exists, but is borne through interaction, is the key in modern physics. Then, realizing that if specks of space, matter, and energy count nothing by their-selves, the leap into macro-scale, and people, societies, and nations is natural.
The following quote from a transcript of “Wholeness & Fragmentation,” featuring David Bohm’s says it eloquently:
“I think the difficulty is this fragmentation.. All thought is broken up into bits. Like this nation, this country, this industry, this profession and so on… And they can’t meet. That comes about because thought has developed traditionally in a way such that it claims not to be effecting anything but just telling you the way things are. Therefore, people cannot see that they are creating a problem and then apparently trying to solve it… Wholeness is a kind of attitude or approach to the whole of life. If we can have a coherent approach to reality then reality will respond coherently to us.”
This is not a religiously motivated argument — I am not invoking God, Buddha or asking you to espouse any religion.
I am just asking each one of us to truly give some thoughts on whether you would like your kid to follow the advice of the WSJ.
I, personally, would like my four kids to be respectful and mindful not only of other people, but animals, plants, or even inanimate objects.
After all, we are composed of the same matter — that ‘it’ in front of you is not that different, and is part of our own, delicately balanced world.
If this is the mindset, then the AI and robots our mind will give birth will be conceived with love.
And those are the best behaved children.
Credit: BecomingHuman By: Massimiliano Versace