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7 to 1 A response
by Katya Rukowski |
7 TO 1
A RESPONSE BY KATYA RUKOWSKY
I am not an Athenian or a Greek, but a citizen
of the world.
7 to 1
Have you seen the ads?
They're really good, aren't they?
I don't mean that sarcastically. I think Cybertronics and G/Dyn
and Electracopter should be very pleased. A publicity campaign like
this one costs a staggering amount, but they are getting their money's
worth from Shif & Olajuwa (world's second largest advertising
firm, in charge of the campaign.)
The ad agency copywriters have decided to address some real issues.
Profound issues, like the possibility of severe economic repercussions
if robots are emancipated, or the still more frightening possibility
that we as a species will become obsolete; that by giving AIs their
rights, we will be fatally compromising our own.
These are genuine concerns. Here are some genuine answers.
Katya Rukowski, Wild-Eyed Patron Saint of Toasters
One of the amusing side triumphs of the anti-emancipation propaganda
machine is that they have managed to make my name synonymous with
a kind of dewy-eyed emotionalism; the well-meant sympathy of a woman
(we're All About Nurturing, remember) who, in the absence of a child,
has redirected her excess maternal energy and Sunday School upbringing
onto robots. I guess the thinking is that I outgrew my stuffed animal
collection, but just barely.
Brief system refresh: I am an engineer. I used to recondition tractors
for fun; I have coded my own (dumb) house computer controls; and
I worked with Allen Hobby to build AIs capable of emotion. I made
these things: and when I tell you that there is a clear and unmistakable
difference between a toaster and a Cybertronics 2142 Evolving Intelligence,
please consider that I might know more, in a calm, unemotional way,
about the subject than the Shif & Olujaw copywriters!
But the subliminal message going out is, Those abolitionists care
more about my home appliances than they do about me.
So here's my radical idea: let's not liberate the toasters.
You heard it here first. My engineer's solution to world economic
woes: build machines. Not AIs, not slaves: just regular old computer-controlled
machines like the ones that toast your toast right now. Yes it's
true: after emancipation there will still be toasters. And road
graders. And forklifts. And all those useful machines that have
been systematically lightening the load on human labor since the
Industrial Revolution. I want to profit from the intelligence of
previous engineers just as much as anyone else. I'm happy to have
a computer, a car, a coffee-maker.
The ranters at ARM, and the highly sophisticated ad men behind the
7 to 1 campaign, want to pretend that this is Man vs. Machine. Meat
vs. Metal. Us vs. Them. When of course that isn't the issue at all.
Nobody wants to free the toasters. I don't need to liberate my food
processor.
This discussion is strictly about thinking, feeling beings.
It's Us vs. Us.
7 to 1 Says There's No Essential Difference Between Robots and
Toasters
One thinks and feels. One doesn't. According to the 7 to 1 people,
is there no difference between human beings and doodlebugs?
To claim that a contemporary Evolving Intelligence has more in common
with a can opener than it does with us is ridiculous. But the most
annoying part of this argument is the sheer hypocrisy of it. The
same anti-robot folks pitching this line make it clear with every
action that they don't believe a word of it.
There are laws that state a robot may not run free. There are laws
that state a robot has no rights. There are laws that lay out the
liabilities a robot incurs when he creates a disturbance or runs
away or causes property damage.
What statue, exactly, explicitly denies refrigerators the vote?
Ever see a law that says a chicken can't smuggle itself to Canada?
Didn't think so.
It's enough to make you think you think the anti-robot faction knows
perfectly well that AIs think and feel. It's obvious even to them
that a robot can desire freedom; can formulate political opinions;
can be held accountable for its actions.
And if even 7 to 1 and the SPCB believe robots think and feel, what
was their justification for enslaving them again?
We Made Them; We Can Do What We Want To Them
Are you allowed to maim or kill your child?
Didn't think so.
The Economy Will Collapse
Do you want to live in poverty? I don't. If robots take over all
the "white collar" work, do you want to work at back-breaking
menial jobs for low pay? I don't.
The rich and their apologists said the economy would go to hell
if we abolished slavery. They said the same thing about ending child
labor, and raising the minimum wage, and cutting down to the twenty-hour
work week. And it never happened. You know why? Technological innovation.
Machines increase our productivity faster than our gradual retreat
from labor reduces it.
We make more stuff with less work all the time. This is a good thing.
The net effect of ending slavery, and outlawing child labor, and
raising the minimum wage, and cutting back the work week, has always
been the same: a generation later we have a saner, healthier, much
more highly educated population. If we free robots, and yes pay
them wages, and yes allow them to win jobs on the basis of their
merits, productivity will rise again, everybody will be forced to
work less, everybody will be able to devote their time and energy
and intelligence to more vital, creative, and spiritually challenging
pursuits, in an economy that is creating ever more wealth.
What exactly was wrong with that again?
Okay, But What About My Daughter? How Will She Compete?
Well, if she truly, deeply, with all her soul, wants to be a bookkeeper,
or calculate utility bills, or be a receptionist, then yes, I admit
it: the robots will out compete her. But then, when I was a little
girl growing up with my Dad in Nebraska, I truly, deeply, with all
my soul wanted to be a defensive lineman for the Cornhuskers. Life
can be cruel that way.
Your daughter will get over it.
I would be the last person to argue that humanity should sit around
all day watching hollies and drinking beer. But I also worked on
a farm too long when I was young to believe in the inherent nobility
of doing hard stupid repetitive work. I'd much rather do hard, interesting,
creative work. Wouldn't you?
Nobody denies that emancipating robots and paying them for their
labor will have a major short-term effect on the economy. There
will be winners and losers in such a changed financial environment.
The most notable losers, of course, will be the people who profit
from the slave trade.
Come to think of it, that sort of explains why the good folks at
Cybertronics and G/Dyn are spending so much money on the 7 to 1
campaign, doesn't it?
If It's All So Simple, Why Am I Not Convinced?
You're afraid. You're afraid of what a major economic realignment
might mean. You have a place in the world and a family to support
and don't want to rock the boat.
More profoundly, you are worried that if the AIs get the vote they
will use their new-found political power in ways not in the best
interest of humanity. Maybe they will even want revenge for their
sufferings.
Most profoundly of all, you worry that accepting the "humanity"
of AIs will somehow cheapen our own claim to specialness, to superiority.
You worry that they will be better than us: smarter, stronger, faster,
undying.
I know this because I'm afraid of all of these things.
I don't know exactly what the future will hold if we emancipate
sentient beings. History, both economic and political, suggests
that the world will be a better place for it, but I can't know.
I know many brilliant men and women who are smarter than me; the
knowledge hasn't crushed my self-esteem. I know plenty of folks
taller, and stronger, and more graceful than me, and I still manage
to
special. I feel grateful to be able to talk with the clever and
admire the graceful, and I can't help but imagine that brilliant
and gifted AIs would make fascinating friends and fellow citizens,
but I can't know for sure if I would still feel that way after Emancipation.
About all I can say for sure is that what we are doing now is wrong.
A current Evolving Intelligence is as smart, as self-aware and as
capable of suffering, as you or I. To keep such a being in merciless
bondage is wrong: that's the one sure thing in this debate. And
I know you know that. And I know that even the people behind 7 to
1 know that. And all I want is for us to act honorably on that certain
difference between right and wrong.
If Leonardo Da Vinci had been a slave, we would never have had
the Mona Lisa. If Lincoln had been a woman, he would never have
led this nation through the Civil War. How many Da Vinci's and Lincolns
have we already wasted out of fear and greed? How many AI Einsteins
and Marie Curies are we throwing away right now because we punish
any sign of independent will or action? Every being, artificial
or otherwise, is a valuable part of our world. The lives of all
of us are cheapened by the loss of any of us.
7 to 1 invokes the Athens of Pericles and Plato as a shining example
of a state founded on the bedrock of slavery. Why can't we do better?
Why shouldn't we make the words of Pericles a reality
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We do not copy our neighbors,
instead we are an example to them. We favor the many,
instead of the few. For this is what is called a democracy.
Our laws provide equal justice for all in their private
disputes, yet we do not ignore claims of excellence.
When a citizen distinguishes himself, he is called upon
to serve the state in preference to others, not as a
matter of privilege, bur rather as a reward to his merit.
This freedom that we enjoy extends
into our ordinary lives. We are not suspicious of one
another. We do not abuse our neighbor if he chooses
his own way
. We are taught to respect the law,
and never to forget that we must protect the injured
.
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Now is the time to throw open
the doors of our hearts. To accept that we, and we alone,
have the ability to protect the injured and the helpless
to cast off their bonds of slavery so that they too
can live without suspicion. So each can choose its own
way without abuse or torment.
Lincoln said,
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Our fathers brought forth on this continent a
new nation, conceived in Liberty, and dedicated to the
proposition that all men are created equal. Now we are
engaged in a great civil war, testing whether that nation,
or any nation so conceived and so dedicated can long
endure.
The greatest issue of our time is fully upon us. If
you know in your heart that the enslavement of thinking
and feeling beings is wrong, you must act on that knowledge.
We, even we here, hold the power and bear the responsibility.
In giving freedom to the slave, we ensure freedom to
the free-honorable alike in what we give and what we
preserve. We shall nobly save or meanly lose the last,
best hope of earth.
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-Second Message
to Congress
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Within the next two weeks, Julia Mann will introduce a Senate bill
calling for a binding referendum on the status of so-called "sentient
property." Support the bill. Vote in the referendum. Do the
right thing.
It's that simple.
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