rpanonmod ([personal profile] rpanonmod) wrote in [community profile] rpanons2014-03-29 09:56 pm

Okay

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Re: ROBOTS

(Anonymous) 2014-03-31 01:12 pm (UTC)(link)
don't apologize at all! thank you anon!! and this particular character is fully sentient, but their understanding of their own emotions is not so great.

Re: ROBOTS

(Anonymous) 2014-04-01 12:19 am (UTC)(link)
If your robot character wants to explore the understanding of their own emotions, then they might want to look into things that inspire pure emotional reaction in humans. The Emergency Medical Hologram in Voyager built himself a fake family in the Holodeck to try familial relations. Data got a pet cat. But think about what brings out emotions in people: music, dance, movies/plays, religion, family, sports - there would be different reasons for them to look into all sorts of things. They might learn about preferences, what works for them, what doesn't, what they have an affinity for "just because," just like humans do, but they'd want to pin a reasoning onto it.

If they like soap operas, they might start to emulate them to experience the emotional highs and lows without thinking of the consequences to personal relationships. Or a certain piece of music might bring them to tears or the closest thing they have to tears. (I recommend the story Virtuoso by Herbert Goldstone, which you can find here: http://lostsciencefiction.com/free-stories/virtuoso-by-herbert-goldstone-a-rarity-from-1953/ I read it a long time ago and it's been one of my standbys for robots relating to humans.)

Basically, sci-fi loves robots and the difference between them and humans. Just don't ascribe solely to Asimov. Friendly AI has a lot more opportunities than strictly following the three laws.