Monthly Archives: April 2012

The Corollary to Asimov´s Laws of Robotics: Robot Sex Week (Part V)

“A great science fiction detective story” - Ian Watson, author of The Universal Machine

Luck and Death at the Edge of the World

Not the Usual Announcement: Several papers available as PDFs are cited in today´s post. Normally I would have included them in the HA Library (aka HAL, for you 2001 fans) — and I´ll do exactly that as soon as possible — but I´m operating on borrowed equipment at the moment due to a blown hard drive, so I don´t have my usual resources available to me today.  Of course this makes the usual announcement all the more important.

The Usual Announcement: Remember to click on the Luck & Death banner, above. For a limited time — getting shorter every day — you can order a special edition of the book at the regular retail price of $5.00. Free sample chapters are available, as is an MP3 sample chapter for your iPod or other device. If you enjoy this site, try it!

Okay, now that you´ve clicked and ordered your copy, by all means move on to the Robot Sex…

I have a continuing soft spot for Isaac Asimov, having grown up on his stories, even though his writing style is pretty stilted and his stories often now seem dated in some respects.

In 1942 he articulated his three laws of robotics, which helped fictional robots to make the transition from being absurd mechanical puppy dogs and monsters into something more interesting.  These laws were intended, essentially, to impose ethical constraints upon robots(and to create interesting conflicts within the stories):

  1. A robot may not injure a human being or, through inaction, allow a human being to come to harm.
  2. A robot must obey the orders given to it by human beings, except where such orders would conflict with the First Law.
  3. A robot must protect its own existence as long as such protection does not conflict with the First or Second Laws.

The concerns embodied in these laws has, by today, become something genuine and pressing, for instance in the military application of robotic devices whose very purpose is sometimes to injure or even kill human beings.  See, for instance, Robots in War: Issues of  Risk and Ethics [pdf], by Lin et al.

A scene from Time of Eve

A scene from Time of Eve

But several readers of the Robot Sex Week series have raised the issue of a corollary to Asimov´s laws: that rules that should also constrain our treatment of robots.

In the context of this series the question has to do specifically with sex, but of course it is part of a larger set of more general concerns.

If we create artificial humans, can we ethically create them for our own purposes, or should they be emancipated and have the same rights of self-determination that a natural person has?

If the answer to that question is something like `as long as they´re mere mechanical devices we can do what we want with them, but when they approach sentience we have to stop´ then this raises further questions.

For instance, where along that spectrum do we draw the line? And even if something really is a mere machine and we therefore feel free to subject it to any desire we may have (however lofty or base) does giving ourselves that liberty potentially degrade or de-humanize us, especially if the machine is a reasonable facimile of a human being?

A scene from Time of Eve

A scene from Time of Eve

Like me, you probably have preliminary answers to some of these questions — whether rooted in your philosophical outlook, your politics, or even your religion — but unexamined, instinctive reactions aren´t a sufficient response to an important set of questions.

Take the example of Stephen Peterson, an assistant professor of philosophy at  Niagara University who has posted a draft version of a very interesting paper entitled The Ethics of Robot Servitude.

Peterson makes it clear early in the paper that his preliminary response to the notion of whether robot servitude could ever be ethical was negative, but the process of researching and writing the paper led him to the opposite conclusion:

I argue against this universal consensus in the literature. That is, I argue that robot servitude is permissible. This conclusion is not only contrary to the literature; it is also contrary to my own expectations. It emerged as a surprising consequence of my research into the abstract nature of intelligence.

And Peterson doesn´t reach his conclusion by denying that robots could ever reach the point where we would have to logically grant their personhood, as he makes clear in another paper, Designing People to Serve [pdf].

You can see a long video from  the North Amercan Computing and Philosophy Conference 2006 at which Peterson spoke on the topic, here.  Peterson´s talk begins about a third of the way through the video, but it´s easy to skip ahead to his part.

A scene from Time of Eve

A scene from Time of Eve

Another, very different approach to the ethical considerations involved in the sexual use of artificial persons by natural ones arises in a paper by Amuda and Tijaani entitled Ethical and Legal Implications of Sex Robot: an Islamic Perspective, which can be downloaded here.

Note: the authors are clearly not native English speakers and the translation used for  this paper is very poor.  It is entirely possible that I have misunderstood parts of the paper for this reason, although in general its meaning is relatively plain even when the expression of that meaning is muddled.  All quotes are exact.

First, the authors conclude that sex with a robot (referred to as `sex robot,´ possibly as a tranposition of `robot sex´) is a breach of Islamic law:

…if the judge sees that any prescribed punishment by him will serve the purpose of punishment against the criminal who committed sex robot because it against humanism and abuse to the marriage institution. If such an act failed to be legally and severely curtailing by the authority and it’s allowed to spread, many will divorce their wives or husband while some may jettison marriage simply because he or she is enjoying with robot.

Secondly, they conclude that marriage to a robot is also prohibited:

It can be inferred from the concept of marriage that it’s a union between male and female and any marriage contract with robot or to the same sex is considered as crime and sin. Therefore, marriage with robot is a punishable crime under Islamic law.

Finally, while the authors´point of view may be alien to a reader who doesn´t share their perspective — me, for instance — they do treat the questions they confront with seriousness and they acknowledge potentially positive aspects of permitting sexual relations between natural humans and artificial ones — they simply conclude that the weight of the evidence is that Islamic law nonetheless forbids it:

Although the emergence of full sexbot as alternative to both human sexes is still at infant stage, its reality cannot be underestimated. Looking at various technological, social, psychological and economic factors that are positively contributing to this trend, it is noted in this study that, dynamic analysis and discussion on ethical and legal implications of this emerging trend are essential as a preventive measure against its possible negative impact. Although, several positive reasons may be advanced in its favor, there is need to weight both size of the ‘coin’ in order to proffer a sustainable solution that will advance humanity towards social peace and stability.

I would be interested to hear from other muslims — and indeed, from people of any other faith — as to how their interpretation of the issues agrees with or departs from that of Amuda and Tijaani.

A scene from Time of Eve

A scene from Time of Eve

Let´s conclude this post with another very different interpretation of the ethics of human-robot interaction. The anime series Time of Eve – the source of all the images in this post — centres on the growing independence of androids and the issue of discrimination against them by human beings:

In the not-too-distant future, androids have come into common usage. Rikuo Sakisaka, who has taken robots for granted for his entire life, one day discovers that Sammy, his home android, has been acting independently and coming and going on her own. He finds a strange phrase recorded in her activity log, “Are you enjoying the Time of Eve?” He, along with his friend Masakazu Masaki, traces Sammy’s movements and finds an unusual cafe, “The Time of Eve”. Nagi, the barista, informs them that the cafe’s main rule is to not discriminate between humans and androids. Within the cafe, androids do not display their status rings, and, when patrons depart, the door is automatically locked for two minutes to prevent someone from following them to discover their true nature.

You read a discussion of Time of Eve here and you can watch all the original episodes (with English subtitles) online at CrunchyRoll.

Robot Sex Week (Part IV): Touch-a Touch-a Touch-a Touch Me, I Wanna Be Dirty

“A great science fiction detective story” - Ian Watson, author of The Universal Machine

Luck and Death at the Edge of the World

Don´t you dare! I know you want to rush straight on to the sexy stuff, but first you should click on the Luck & Death banner, above.

For a limited time you can order a special edition of the book at the regular retail price of $5.00. Free sample chapters are available, as is an MP3 sample chapter for your iPod or other device. If you enjoy this site, try it!

Okay, now that you´ve clicked and ordered your copy, by all means move on to the Robot Sex…

The secondary title of this installment of Robot Sex Week — or Sex, Intimacy, and Artificial Humans, as it´s formally known — comes from the Rocky Horror Picture Show of course, when staid Janet bursts into song upon finally realizing that she really, no really, wants to have sex for the first time.

And, as the song implies, there is no sex without a sense of touch.

That might seem obvious, but when it comes to robot sex, we are not the only ones who need a sense of touch. For an artificial person to be able to realistically engage in sex instead of lying inert or fumbling around like the worst teenage virgin, it too must have a sense of touch.

Enter haptic technology — the technology of touch.

A good introduction to haptic technology can be found in Technology Based On Touch: Haptics Technology by Sharma et al, while some indication of the growth of haptics can be found in Analysis of Haptics Evolution from Web Search Engines’ Data by Guerraz and Loscos.

Primitive haptic technology

Primitive haptic technology

You probably know haptic technology primarily through touch-screens, but more sophisticated versions of haptics are on their way. They promise to do two things.

First, they will extend our ability to interact with virtual realities. We will finally be able to actually feel the virtual worlds which at present we mostly just see and hear. As Stephen Brewster puts it in The Impact of Haptic ‘Touching’ Technology on Cultural Applications:

New technologies from the area of virtual reality (VR) now allow computer users to use their sense of touch to feel virtual objects. Touch is a very powerful sense but it has so far been neglected in computing. State-of-the-art haptic (or force-feedback) devices allow users to feel and touch virtual objects with a high degree of realism. An artefact’s surface properties can be modelled so that someone using a haptic device could feel it as a solid, three-dimensional object with different textures, hardness or softness.

Touching the virtual world

Touching the virtual world

To see an example of how haptics are beginning to be applied in practical ways to virtual environments — in this case for medical training — see the first video embedded at the end of this post.

Second, and more relevant for our purposes here, improved haptic technologies will extend the ability of our technology to feel our world and thus interact with us in our natural setting.

To see an approximation of the second phenomenon, see the second video. Note that in this video the haptic technology is being used to provide sensory feedback — a sense of touch — through a robotic device to the surgeon who is operating it. This allows surgeons to operate via robots over great distances without losing a key sensory input.

What will be necessary for a sexually-capable robot, however, is that the haptic feedback not go back to a human, but to the operating system of the robot itself.

The morning after

The post-coital moment

Without effective haptics, a robot´s movements won´t be realistic and, perhaps more importantly, won´t be responsive, the way a human sexual partner´s movements are. Without that, robot sex is unlikely to be anything more than a novelty.

After all, a great part of the pleasure in sex comes not just from being touched, but from touching and from having your touch evoke a reaction.

Of course, one of the issues that always arises when one considers that homo artificialis might operate at a human level in some area — for instance with respect to artificial intelligence and the Turing Test — is, given their adaptability compared with natural persons, isn´t it likely that they will exceed us?

At a minimum it seems possible that a highly capable artificial body, animated by a sophisticated artificial intelligence, will bring some genuinely new experiences to human sexual activity.

And if homo artificialis actually becomes sentient, and particularly if it also becomes independent, maybe it won´t bother having sex with us anymore, or at least won´t have sex exclusively with us. We´re so limited in our capabilities, after all.

Wouldn´t you, if you were a sentient artificial person capable of revamping your body and adjusting your sensory inputs, invent entirely new kinds of sex altogether and engage in them with others who were as capable as you?

Videos

Haptics as an element of virtual reality:

Haptics as a feedback system for robotic devices (discussion of haptics begins at 1:20):

Tagged , , , ,

Sex Times Technology Equals the Future: Robot Sex Week (Part III)

“A great science fiction detective story” - Ian Watson, author of The Universal Machine

Luck and Death at the Edge of the World

Hang on! I know it´s Robot Sex Week and you´re feeling an urgent need to get to the post itself, but before moving on, don´t forget to click on the Luck & Death banner, above.

For a limited time you can order a special edition of the book at the regular retail price of $5.00. Free sample chapters are available, as is an MP3 sample chapter for your iPod or other device. If you enjoy this site, try it!

Okay, Robot Sex Week…

Yesterday we dealt with the prospects for robot love — today we´re sticking entirely to sex.

This series is officially known as Sex, Intimacy, and Artificial Humans, but in honour of today´s purely prurient topic we´re shamelessly going with its informal name: Robot Sex Week.

J.G. Ballard once said Sex times technology equals the future. Was he right?

Will we start copulating with our machines? Let me ask it the other way around: is there any reason to think that we won´t?

No, if the history of technology is any indication.

Note: A special thanks to the reader who wrote me to point out that many women are already having sex with robots — I still am not sure if she was referring to vibrators or unsatisfying partners. And on that note, my apologies to any staight female or gay male readers. Fembots dominate the images available, and I´m under time constraints today, so no Boybot booty in this post — in my defence, though, the first post in this series featured a distinctly male artificial sex partner.

Cylon -- that is, artificial human -- `Six´ from Battlestar Galactica.

Cylon — that is, artificial human — `Six´ from Battlestar Galactica.

It´s become almost a cliche to note that each new communications technology that develops is able to make the jump from the beta test stage to something commercially viable by channeling pornography. I´m going to adjust that notion in a moment, but first let´s look at it.

The Independent newspaper has a nifty little slideshow that traces some elements of this trend. It covers the Super 8 projector, the Polaroid camera, the VCR, the DVD player, the internet, VOIP (voice over internet protocol), and pay-per-view.

The Guardian agrees with The Independent:

As one senior industry figure put it: ‘For years it has been a dirty secret that one of the key drivers of new consumer technology is sex, pornography. The need to make 3G technology work – and work fast – is exposing that secret.’

Canadian journalist Patchen Barss, who wrote the book The Erotic Engine: How Pornography has Powered Mass Communication, from Gutenberg to Google cites ten technologies that were built on porn: e-commerce, streaming video, webcams, high bandwidth, BBSs, subtitles and closed captioning, microfiche, digital cameras, cable television, and the VCR.

Sexual robot fantasy art

Sexual robot fantasy art

To take the example of the internet, according to the tech news site The Goldstein Report, one porn site alone, Xvideos, gets `4.4 billion page views per month. That’s about 10 times as many as the New York Times and three times as many as CNN.com,´ while New Technology News claims that Porn Accounts For One-Third Of Global Web Traffic.

In 2010 NPR reported that porn providers were looking to cash in on the iPhone 4´s then-new FaceTime feature pretty much the moment it became available.

So what´s my quibble with the formulation of the rule and why is it relevant to robot sex?

  • First, the phenomenon is usually cited as involving communications technology, but I´d suggest that any technology that can deliver any facsimile of sex will follow the trend.
  • Second, the driving factor is sexual desire, not specifically a desire for pornography, so — putting aside for the moment the fact that some people may consider sex with an artificial person inherently pornographic — my argument is that the trend isn´t limited to porn.

So overall my hypothesis is that as robots become capable of delivering sexual thrills, we will accept those thrills gratefully — maybe even greedily — the way we have with each of the preceding technologies.

How close must the resemblance get before it´s close enough?

How close must the resemblance get before it´s close enough?

And of course, as with any technology, there are the early adopters, in this case robot fetishists — see the video from Discovery embedded below.

Fetishits may constitute a minority community, but my bet is that as our robots become more capable and less artificial, the sexual majority will adopt their practices, not as a fetish, but simply as one more sexual outlet.

I´ll happily hear from those who agree or disagree — you can always email me at nas@nassauhedron.com.

Tomorrow: Day 4 of Robot Sex Week — Don´t Miss It!

Tagged , , , ,

Sex, Intimacy, and Artificial Humans — (Part II)

“A great science fiction detective story” - Ian Watson, author of The Universal Machine

Luck and Death at the Edge of the World

Hang on! I know you´re anxious to get to the love and the sex and all the sweaty good stuff, but before moving on, don´t forget to click on the Luck & Death banner, above. For a limited time you can order a special edition of the book at the regular retail price of $5.00. Free sample chapters are available, as is an MP3 sample chapter for your iPod or other device. If you enjoy this site, try it!

Okay, now on to Robot Sex Week…

Yesterday we began this series, now informally dubbed Robot Sex Week.

We started with look at David Levy and his thoughts on sexual relations between humans and robots and even the possibility that we would form loving attachments to synthetic humans.

Today it´s time for some counterpoint, at least with respect to the love. (I promise we´ll get back to the sex very soon.)

Meet Dylan Evans, a British academic and author. Evans has written several popular science books and is the founder and CEO of Projection Point, a company that designs risk intelligence training programs for corporate clients.

Dylan Evans

Dylan Evans

Evans has written one chapter in a book called Close Engagements with Artificial Companions: Key Social, Psychological, Ethical and Design Issues.

The chapter is entitled Wanting the Impossible: the Dilemma at the Heart of Intimate Human-Robot Relationships and confronts David Levy pretty directly, mano a mano as it were, on the issue of love with homo artificialis.

Very kindly, he´s put the uncorrected proofs for his chapter online in their entirety (13 pages) so you can read what he has to say without having to pay US$149.00 for the book.

The opening summary sets out his terms:

In a recent book entitled Love and Sex with Robots, the British scholar David Levy has argued that relationships with robot Companions might be more satisfying than relationships with humans, a claim which I call “the greater satisfaction thesis” (GST). The main reason Levy provides in support of GST is that people will be able to specify the features of robot Companions precisely in accordance with their wishes (which I call the total specification argument or TSA). In this paper, I argue that TSA is wrong. In particular, the argument breaks down when we consider certain behavioral characteristics that we desire in our partners. I illustrate my argument with a thought-experiment involving two kinds of robot – the FREEBOT, which is capable of rejecting its owner permanently, and the RELIABOT, which is not.

Reliabot -- the obedient pole dancer

Reliabot -- the obedient pole dancer

Evans concludes that the Reliabot (I can´t go along with the use of all upper case letters) doesn´t give us what we crave in a relationship:

People often say they want their partners to be reliable, faithful, always there for them, never to leave them, and so on. But they want these qualities to be the fruit of an active and ongoing choice. The most effective way to signal that there is a real choice involved here is for the partner to drop hints that there is a genuine possibility that they could leave, if they ever wanted to. So, paradoxically, for people to feel secure that their partners freely choose to be with them, and not with anyone else, they must occasionally be made aware of the partner’s freedom by occasional rejections (huffs, moods, and so on), and by the occasional sign that one’s partner finds other people attractive too. It can be very painful when one’s partner is grumpy, or seems attracted to someone else, but it is also strangely compelling.

At the same time he argues that the Freebot, which has the liberty to reject us just like a human would, has nothing to offer that human partners can´t give us already.

It´s a tidy little dichotomy, and without having read Levy´s book I can´t say for sure that it doesn´t give a convincing refutation of Levy´s position.

But is that enough? What I mean is, putting Levy aside, does Evans´ argument stand on its own? Crucially, the argument can´t yet be tested, so what if it could be?

The fulcrum of the entire argument — and again, to be fair, this may derive from Levy — is that the attraction of the robot is its lack of free will. But if we imagine a time (possibly distant, possibly not, depending on your view of the technology) when a type of robot exists that could test Evans´theory, is unwavering obedience really the only thing it would have to offer us?

If the robot isn’t just a sophisticated sex doll (apologies for that wording to any Real Dolls out there, at least one of whom I know reads this page), but comes with a sufficiently advanced artificial intelligence, it could offer its human partner an intellectual challenge that is specific to his or her interests and pitched at an appropriate level — neither so high as to be insurmountable, nor so low as to be boring. Would that be enough to begin to evoke a genuine emotional reaction?

The reflective robot

The reflective, challenging robot

Imagine the companion and teacher that a robot might be if, in essence, it embodied all the information on the internet, but all that data about the world was mediated by an artificial personality. Isn´t that something to which a person might begin to have a deep emotional attachment?

Now include within that mediating personality a set of realistic facial expressions, gestures, vocal inflections, and other non-linguistic forms of communication that tend to evoke emotional reactions in all of us — how about now?

My argument isn´t that any of these examples is sufficient — this isn´t an academic paper, so I´m not treating the question completely rigourously. My point is simply that I believe Evans´argument is too simplistic.

I say thanks to Dylan Evans for raising the stakes, and certainly it´s good to hear an intelligent, serious argument against Levy´s position, but I´m not convinced yet.

Tomorrow: `Sex times technology equals the future´ — J.G. Ballard

Sex, Intimacy, and Artificial Humans (Part I)

“A great science fiction detective story” - Ian Watson, author of The Universal Machine

Luck and Death at the Edge of the World

Before moving on, don´t forget to click on the Luck & Death banner, above. For a limited time you can order a special edition of the book at the regular retail price of $5.00. Free sample chapters are available, as is an MP3 sample chapter for your iPod or other device. If you enjoy this site, try it!

Synthetic Humanity + Sex

The topic of artificial humanity is inherently provocative, irrespecitve of the fact that we are increasingly incorporating our technology into our bodies as a matter of simple medical progress. (Movement toward artificial intelligence is less obvious and certain, but it remains a live issue.)

The topic of sex and interpersonal intimacy — even just between humans — is perhaps even more provocative, regardless of the fact that there are few things that are more central to our lives.

Combine the two and you get something explosive.

Recent News Reports

Recently an academic paper called Robots, Men, and Sex Tourism (as yet hidden behind a paywall, but receiving comment in numerous news items) has stirred up this particular hornet´s nest.

It´s not a new issue, but it´s one that will become increasingly relevant as technology progresses. In fact, a quick glance reveals so much material and so many sub-issues — technical, epidemiological, philosophical, psychological, and even religious — that this will be the first of an ongoing series of posts on the topic.

Robot Sex 01

David Levy

We have to start somewhere and we might as well start with David Levy.

Levy is one of the most notable authors in this area. He is an International Master chess player and businessman and the author of Love and Sex With Robots: The Evolution of Human-Robot Relationships.

Love & Sex with Robots

Love & Sex with Robots

You can find a review of the book by Rachel Maines here. (Maines is a visiting scholar in the Department of Science and Technology Studies at Cornell University and the author of The Technology of Orgasm.)

You can also find a series of questions sent in to New Scientist, with Levy´s answers, here.

Levy has a related paper that´s accessible (and that dovetails nicely with the recent one in the news) entitled Robot Prostitutes as Alternatives to Human Sex Workers that can be found in the Homo Artificialis Library.

Sex + Love

I´ve written previously that interacting with artificial humans by touch will increasingly trigger reactions to our synthetic counterparts that are conditioned by evolution and to some extent beyond our control. Sex may be the most powerful form of haptic communication there is, and while it doesn´t always involve emotional intimacy, it frequently does, so one issue raised by having sex with homo artificialis is that of falling in love.

A news item on sex and marriage with robots can be found here.

If you prefer something more academic, Kahn et al have investigated this area in a paper entitled Psychological Intimacy with Robots, which can also be found in the Homo Artificialis Library.

Video Interview

An excellent, in-depth interview with Levy about his book is embedded below.

Innovation in Head-Up Displays – One Step Closer to Augmented Reality & Immersive VR

“A great science fiction detective story” - Ian Watson, author of The Universal Machine

Luck and Death at the Edge of the World

A new contact lens developed by Innovega Inc. may help bring the practical HUD (head-up display) one step closer to reality.

You can find a brief research paper on HUDs from the University of Massachussets at Amhert here: Personal Head Up Display, by Ivan Bercovich, Radu­Andrei Ivan, Jeffery Little and Felipe Villas­Boas.

Reportedly, the new lens from Innovega allows the eye to do what it can´t naturally do, which is focus on an image that´s projected directly onto the lens of eyewear that the user is weating — a difficult task in itself — while also not impairing the ability to focus on objects farther away.

Projections onto eyewear has been in development for some time, but the eye´s natural limits in terms of focus have stymied the development of practical augmented reality, in which information about one´s environment is super’imposed over one´s natural view of the environment itself.

Embedded below is a video featuring Randall Sprague of Innovega explaining the project.

Another approach is being taken by Google with its Google Glasses (video below), but experts have told Wired magazine that Google may have trouble delivering on its promised technology.

The Accidental Transhuman

“A great science fiction detective story” - Ian Watson, author of The Universal Machine

Luck and Death at the Edge of the World

In my last post I mentioned (and linked to) a story called Internal Investigation that was included in a podcast by the BBC arts program The Strand.

That story was part of a series, Future Anatomies, in which authors were asked “imagine the effect developments in medicine and biotechnology might have on humans in the not-so-distant future.”

Another excellent story in that series is Wasteland, Wasteland, Wasteland by Claire Vaye Watkins [home page, interview, Amazon.com page].

Watkins´ story considers the unintentional development of a species of Homo Artificialis, not through augmentation or implantation, but through mutation via exposure to nuclear waste. In that sense it has a classic 1970s scifi kind of feel, while nevertheless avoiding seeming dated.

Claire Vaye Watkins

Claire Vaye Watkins

Watkins has published in Granta and the legendary Paris Review, which is pretty lofty stuff. People often write about her work in the kind overly precious babble-prose that makes me want to immediately go drinking with some engineers.  Like this endorsement of her short story collection Battleborn:

“The book feels like a portrait of the human heart, famished for beauty and love, but finally and almost always wrecked by its own hungers.”

Yikes! Pretension overload — Danger Will Robinson!

The thing is, though, that this story is the real deal.

Wasteland is great science fiction and it´s rooted in a real-life issue that confronts us today and, more particularly, on the long timescales that life extension through artificial embodiment may increasingly make possible.

The issue is communication with the future, not in some science-fictional, time travel way, but in a very real, practical sense.  It´s called nuclear semiotics.

When we store nuclear waste, we have to label the site as hazardous, but given the longevity of the hazard the warning may have to outlive the country, the language, the culture.

It may need to be understood by descendants of ours who are far more technologically advanced than we are, or who are living in the equivalent of ancient Babylon after a devastating war or social collapse (much like the Grey Zones in my novel, by the way — click the banner at the top of this page).

This means that it has be be as universal as possible.  It may have to bypass language entirely and use symbols (which is not always easy or practical).

If this seems like a fantasy, rest assured that the U.S. government has already been hard at work on it, assembling a team that included astrophysicist and science fiction author Gregory Benford, who wrote at length about the experience in his fascinating and entertaining book Deep Time.

You can read an extensive excerpt from Deep Time here.

You can find excerpts and illustrations from the report on the issue here.

Or you can read the whole damned report, Reducing the Likelihood of Future Human Activities That Could Affect Geologic High-level Waste Repositories by the Human Interference Task Force.

Watkins is familiar with the locale, being a Nevada native — the government´s original intention was to apply nuclear semiotics to the Yucca Mountain Nuclear Waste Depository site, although it was later defunded.

Just as importantly, she is clearly familiar with nuclear semiotics itself, as the description of the spiky concrete sculpture in her story makes clear.  Using a sculpture that communicated the idea of stay the hell away, this place is bad news was one idea considered by the government team, although in the story the local kids use it as a place to skateboard.

Warning sculpture "Spikes Bursting Through Grid," (concept by Michael Brill and art by Safdar Abidi)

Warning sculpture “Spikes Bursting Through Grid,” (concept by Michael Brill and art by Safdar Abidi)

So ignore all the blather that´s been written about Watkins, and forget that the last time you read a story with this theme Star Wars had just come out.  Wasteland,  Wasteland,  Wasteland is a great story and you can listen to it here.

Tagged ,

Future Anatomies: New Capacities Breed New Opportunities to be Incapacitated

“A great science fiction detective story” - Ian Watson, author of The Universal Machine

Luck and Death at the Edge of the World

This page usually deals in science, not science fiction, but part of its purpose — like it says on the banner — is to look at the culture of artificial humanity, which means turning to the social sciences and to works of imagination.

Today it´s the latter.

The BBC arts program The Strand has one of the better podcasts around, but they aren´t usually given to themes that suit this page.

Anatomy of Japanese folk monsters: Cutaway diagrams from Shigeru Mizuki's Yōkai Daizukai, an illustrated guide to yōkai anatomy.

Anatomy of Japanese folk monsters: Cutaway diagrams from Shigeru Mizuki’s Yōkai Daizukai, an illustrated guide to yōkai anatomy.

Nonetheless, recently they commissioned three stories under the general heading of Future Anatomies, in which authors were asked “imagine the effect developments in medicine and biotechnology might have on humans in the not-so-distant future.”

The first of these is an excellent story called Internal Investigation, by journalist, novelist, and game writer Naomi Alderman [home page, blog, Guardian Newspaper page, interview].

Alderman´s first novel was Disobedience, which raised eyebrows with a story about the daughter of a rabbi who comes out as a lesbian.  She has also written a Dr. Who novel and articles about an videogames, Buffy the Vampire Slayer, and Harry Potter.

The show´s host summarizes it this way:

In Internal Investigations human beings have achieved their optimal physical and mental fitness thanks to performance-enhancing biological implants, a practice opposed by a shadowy cult-like organization called the Silencers.

But that doesn´t begin to get at the story´s strengths.

Internal Investigation imagines a technologically enhanced human state, but it does so naturalistically, from the inside out and without a lot of fanfare.  I like whiz bang science fiction as much as the next guy, but this approach is subtle and effective in a way that much techno-celebratory writing is not.

And while I don´t believe the story sides with the Silencers, it does highlight the fact that with new capacities come new opportunities to be incapacitated.

You can listen to the story here.

Bonus link: If you´re interested in the art of anatomy, absolutely don´t miss Street Anatomy, a daily email that looks at the intersection of anatomy and pop culture.  I check mine every single day without fail.

They aren´t sponsoring this, I´m just flat out endorsing them.  Click the link below to get to their archive and to find out how to subscribe.

Street Anatomy banner

Street Anatomy

The Skin We Live In: Skin for Robots, the Mechanics + the Meaning [news item, research papers, video]

“A great science fiction detective story” - Ian Watson, author of The Universal Machine

Luck and Death at the Edge of the World

A news item about a new artificial skin for robots that gives them a haptic sense — the ability to feel — has been getting a lot of play lately.

I haven’t found the particular paper referenced in the item except behind a paywall, but the topic of sensitive robotic skin is the subject of a number of papers that are freely available and I’ve provided links to eight of them below

Research in this area is pragmatic, as one might expect. Giving a robot a sense of touch is an important safety issue.  Robots have traditionally been segregated from human beings in labs or on the factory floor.  Increasingly, however, we share the same space — they have become our housecleaners and they are beginning to drive our cars (even legally, on public roads).

As this process progresses, building haptic sensitivity into our robotics becomes more and more important if robots are to be able to avoid accidentally damaging our property and our bodies.

But embodying our robots in sensitive bodies will also begin to have deeper effects on our lives and integrate us in ways that might not seem obvious at first glance.

Robonaut and astronaut, after Michelangelo

Robonaut and astronaut, after Michelangelo (click image for article)

Touch has a social meaning.  Human being don’t just communicate through words and gestures — at a profound level that is engrained both evolutionarily and culturally, we engage in haptic communictaion.  Touching each other means something and it can also evoke a powerful response that is sometimes beyond our conscious control, whether it is a modestly interactive handshake, a more expressive kiss on both cheeks or arm around the shoulder, or a more intimate kiss, stroke, embrace, or massage.

And, of course, haptics are not only being embedded in the artificial bodies we build to function in the physical world, but are also increasingly also being built into the artificial worlds in which we natural humans spend more and more of our time.  For now practical, commercially viable haptics are limited to the controls on our devices, but given how ubiquitous these controls have become, isn’t it inevitable that the online environment (and other artificial places) will become something we can touch through our avatars?

By embodying our robotics in haptically-enabled forms and by increasingly overlapping our environment with our robots, we are necessarily inviting them into the pre-existing and emotionally charged world of our haptic interaction and by embedding haptics in our artificial environments we are pushing the same boundary in the other direction.

Below: a skinless animatronic baby. It’s creepy precisely because while it looks mechanical, its gestures nonethelss evoke an innate, involuntary protective response. When gestures are combined with and made interactive with a responsive, flesh-like skin, this type of response will be intensified.

Research on Sensitive Robot Skin [all in PDF format]

Tagged , , , , ,
Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.

Join 188 other followers