interspark said:
I was reading Negima earlier (fellow fans will get the reference) and it made me wonder something. Here's the scenario,
A scientific team creates a robot, the very latest tech, it has independant thought, can have detailed conversations with humans, sharing and exchanging new knowledge and even ethical views on subjects, it can make its own decisions on what is right and wrong and even decides how to spend its own time, and, and this is the real important factor, it even has the capacity to fall in love.
The question is, does this robot have a soul? Personally I would say yes, I don't think our origins should determine our right to be human beings, rather, our personalities and emotions should be. Doctor Who once said, "there's more to being human than flesh and blood"
While I doubt it has a soul I as doubt the very existence of the soul being a materialist. While I could write alot on reactions to inputs not requiring the same possesses and where differing possesses matter in determining human like capabilities and qualities and how much so. I can also say that love is no clincher in "souls" a huge chunk of love in one sense is hormonal/chemical reactions to encourage reproduction. However platonic loves are another matter. My love of logic and writing is no in the same field of love as what I feel for my girlfriend there is overlap but I'd be forced to say there both platonic and none platonic love there.
I feel the question would be better posed if the idea of soul was replaced with something more "real" such as rights.
Realitycrash said:
Since I am a Philosophy major, and I deeply get my panties in a bundle over topics like this, I will first need to know: How do you define a soul?
Without knowing what it is, we can't apply it on either robots, or humans.
I'm in the exact same boat while I'm currently not studying philosophy I have done until recently.
I'm not going to vote as I feel I can't give a valid answer. I don't think anything exits beyond the physical world no soul in another "magical" dimension but there is no denying things can exist above the purely physical parts such as computer stored data and written text. With out going deeply into the different camps of monism and dualism; and all that entrails. I'm guessing you are presenting an idea like that of blockhead. If not the exact same question begin raised by this thought experiment then a very similar one.
Link for reference:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blockhead_(computer_system)
Edit: the block head persented there is one diffrent from what I mean to reffer to. However it still has a part to play in this debate. For the sake of making my point I'm in the proces of digging though my text books to find the right thought experiment and I'm quite sure Ned Block came up with it. There is also the possibility that wiki is wrong slash being rather broad on the issue.