Ah!David Handeye wrote:Yes. But you see, maybe I was too much engaged with the plot of the movie, so that I wasn't able to express well. I mean, as I have written in my previous posts, this was not a typical machine/computer, this was a "computer", so hardware, but uploaded with a consciousness of a "real" person. However, as MF says in the movie, always a machine. Now, the heart of the matter, is not how to understand if we're talking to a machine or to a human being (Turing test), but it is how to demonstrate, in any way, to a thinking machine of having a consciousness of our own. I don't know if I was able to explain, but it's a bit different. Anyway, it's a beautiful film, the fact is that I like science fiction, but this one is involved with philosophical issues too, that I know everyone on this wonderful forum like, as I do.
I see I've poked at the wrong things then.
A machine shouldn't theoretically have limitations like humans do, we often have faulty memory in what color things have and where things are placed, we are prone to false memories where a machine should in theory have "photographic memory", that is 1 of the big differences that would give away a machine from human.
So that leaves us with 2 scenarios, if the programmer has implemented such faulty details into the program allowing the program-AI having human faults.
OR! If the programmer has eradicated such human faults.
And!
Did the programmer allow irrational and psychopathic behavior? Or was such things weeded out in the programming? What programmer would allow an AI to have psychopathic behavior?