Yep, which really annoyed me about the movie honestly. Because it just turned into another "AI is bad mmkay?" story, like all the others.Zhukov said:1. Is Caleb going to die?
Well, several of his AI's wanted to escape. Remember Caleb sees that video file footage, showing the one android beating her arms until they broke, screaming "LET ME OUUUUUT!!", until she had stubs for hands. So either he frequently builds them with a level of desire for freedom, or it's an emergent property of that level of mental development. I personally go with "it's an emergent quality of being actually self-aware", and not just "he programmed them to want to escape"Zhukov said:2. Why does Ava want to escape?
She's an AI. Everything in her was deliberately put in there. But Nathan never mentions programming a desire to escape. Yet she clearly wants to. All the previous AIs that Nathan built are also shown wanting or attempting to escape.
Well it's sort of the core of the concept of AI stories "Are they just a collection of programming? Or do they have the capacity for independent thought, beyond their software/hardware?" I mean we are a fabricated intelligence in a way, and we've got the desire for freedom. So if the point of the creator is to "make a machine that is a human in every way possible", then it would have to include the capacity to think beyond what is immediately relevant. To have desires that you create for yourself, based on your experiences and so on. An AI story that doesn't question "what is it to be human?" isn't really telling an AI story, and is just telling a story that happens to have a robot in it.Zhukov said:This is something that often bugs me with AI characters in fiction. They're often shown as having some kind of desire or goal that has no reason to exist, be it freedom, self-preservation, curiosity or whatever. These things wouldn't exist in a fabricated intelligence unless they were included as part of the fabrication.
The first comment here. That's pretty much what every AI story theorizes and asks. Like I said above, the crux of AI stories is to question "Where does the line between machine and alive lay? And how would we know we've crossed it? What makes someone human? If a machine can accurately replicate all of the traits we define as human, are they human? Do they have a consciousness? Or are they just parroting what they've been programmed?" These are all at the core of AI stories. So yes, I would say the director/writers were trying to ask that question, while also telling a compelling story. I think they did pretty good with it, up until the end.Zhukov said:Is the film suggesting that a desire for freedom is intrinsic to true consciousness/intelligence, or is it just supposed to go without saying that Nathan included such a desire in her programming as part of the experiment?
Yes but the machine was designed by a human, specifically to replicate humanity. To have human intelligence, human consciousness, human desires. So projecting human motivations onto a thing designed to replicate humanity as closely as possibly, seems fairly reasonable. I mean that's the entire plot/discussion of the movie. Every conversation they have, either between the two humans, or the human and the AI, is directly related to what it is to be a human, and how you define that, or how you tell the difference.Zhukov said:Yes, but I'm not a machine.008Zulu said:2- If your entire world is a single room, but you have knowledge of the world, why would you accept that one room when you can have so much more?
This is what I'm getting at. You're automatically projecting human motivations, or at least animal motivations, onto an entity that is neither of those things.