Should Robots Feel Pain?
If you like to read even a little bit about the tech world, you probably are already aware of the strange, sci-fi like future that awaits us, where robots will walk among us as we walk among ourselves.
The recent exponential advancements in robotics and especially artificial intelligence (AI) has made it clear that the future is one with intelligent machines in it. The software side of things is much more advanced right now but the hardware side is catching up fast too.
In fact, Google’s Ray Kurzweil, believes that the singularity will occur by 2045 where AI surpasses human intelligence. Robots equipped with such intelligence could be inevitable and therefore, it is more important now than ever, that we try to answer some of the biggest questions relating to them.
Because let’s face it, evil machines taking over is no more a joke. It could very well be a reality we all could live in (or die in). I am not saying that it will go down like that but it could go either way and we need to be prepared for every scenario.
It Could Go Either Way
When anything has the ability to think for itself, it begins forming its own ideologies and conclusions about even the tiniest of things. We humans start doing it right from our childhood.
Imagine an artificially intelligent robot getting the ability to do the same. What kind of conclusions about the world it would derive is anybody’s guess. It could turn out to be a friendly one for us or an evil one depending on how it sees our species.
I think much of the fear of robots taking over stems from the fact that no matter how intelligent they may get, they still aren’t ‘alive’ and they simply can’t ‘feel’ anything! This makes them appear as cold and unforgiving.
Therefore, one could think that maybe changing that aspect about them could humanise them more and could help them understand humanity and its actions better. Feelings of love, anger, hate seem impossible to ‘give’ to robots right now but pain, a fundamental feeling, is certainly possible to code in and scientists are trying to answer if we should give robots the ability to feel pain.
The Purpose of Pain
Nobody likes the sensation of pain and yet it serves a great purpose in our lives. Whether it be physical pain or emotional one, it tells the brain that there is something wrong and it needs fixing.
The objective of giving robots the ability to feel pain (in terms of overflow of signals to its processors in response to a stimuli), is multifold and it is important to understand all of them.
First, it will help them protect themselves in various situations where there is danger, just as humans do. With more robots working for us and along side us, this will be important.
Second, the ability to feel pain (in their own way) could evolve into empathy for humans as they “understand” how it feels for us. This will greatly humanise them and steer them away from the cold, logical machines that are often portrayed as threats to humanity. In fact, this could even drive them to protect humans just as how we protect other humans.
But, Isn’t It Cruel?
Just think about this for a second. There is something that doesn’t and cannot experience pain on its own and if you had the choice to give it the ability to feel pain (suffer), would you want to do it?
In a way, that equates to cruelty. Sure, pain serves a purpose in protecting our own life but the suffering can sometimes be too unbearable (physical or emotional) and if I had the choice to let someone (or even something) experience it, I certainly wouldn’t do so.
Yes, it can be argued that robots are not really living beings and they are not really ‘feeling’ pain, it’s rather just code that makes them think they are feeling it. But doesn’t our pain mechanism work the same way?
In any case, these kind of questions are not just thought experiments anymore as we are fast moving into a future where these will have real life implications and the decisions that we take today, could determine future events.
Thank you. :)
Thanks for reading :)
This is a very interesting topic. Is very difficult to make your mind about how far we should take AI and Robots. Whatever we do, the outcome will be very difficult to determine. In someway i feel it all depends on how well coded the AI is in giving value to life. Lets wait and see
Yea, you are right. It is difficult to gauge how far they should be taken because a lot depends on it. We are literally writing humanity's future right now and every decision is important.
that was very interesting, i have never think like that before, just got some more brain cells :), thank you for your work.
The more you mimic nature , the better. Evolution has been perfecting the brain and how it works for millions of years.
Yes, that's what we have been doing and it has worked out well.
This is a very interesting topic. Is very difficult to make your mind about how far we should take AI and Robots. Whatever we do, the outcome will be very difficult to determine. In someway i feel it all depends on how well coded the AI is in giving value to life. Lets wait and see. Upvoted and Followed!
This same comment was posted above.
Thats very strange. I have no idea how is that possible? If you look at the time i posted my comment you can see it was made at 10/9/2017 at 1:29 PM. The comment above was made on 10/9/2017 at 4:41 PM. So is the post above that was copied from me. I am upvoting your comment for the curious mysterious find. Still i want to know, how did that happen? How did his post showed up before mine? He took my comment to make a quick vote for himself.
Crazy concept to think about. They should be able to be destructed, regardless of whether it hurts or not.
It certainly is crazy!
Great post and great thinking.
I wonder if you could really implement feeling of pain to robots, wouldn't it's decisions be more strict or black&white-ish? As it would make choices in order to avoid the unnecessary pain caused to themselves. Or perhaps they would consider it as a weakness and immediately by self-learning patterns will "upgrade" themselves in such a way that they will block these "feelings". Something comparable to what people were doing in the 2002 movie Equilibrium.
From a technological point of view, I read that it is indeed possible, in a certain way. You also make an interesting point that they could see this as weakness and upgrade themselves to not feel pain. Interesting!
Insane idea to consider. They ought to have the capacity to be destructed, paying little heed to whether it harms or not.
This same comment was posted above. Why are you copying?
Do think about the downside of this! If they feel pain they can be sad or angry, etc. For example: There is a angry woman in walmart and it speaks angrily to the robot, she is the 20th person who dose this to the robot, obviously it will have a response. You might argue that there is a way to code it in to not feel this, but for now we aren’t even sure how to make them feel anything.
Yeah, nobody has the slightest idea of how things could evolve from the point we teach them to feel pain. It could evolve in a number of ways, some of which could prove dangerous.
Exactly, I can't agree with you more. I think that Elon Musk and Stephen Hawkings are quiet right that one day AI may be the greatest threat to human kind.
Good posr
Thank you!
Everything that is created by human has a loophole
I guess?