The robots, Are here.
The
robots, Are here.
For a long as wo/man has had the ability to
produce things that aid and maximises their efforts in their survival, there has always been the inclination
to make the things that are useful, better at whatever function they were
devised to undertake. It has at times been an incremental development of an
artefact, improving its speed of production, a different way of making the item
or an alternative use to which it has been put. Occasional there has been a
rapid step change in different directions and wholly new items have been made
to meet the demands of a new or additional requirement. Inventiveness has
allowed humans to expand and multiply to acquire and consume more of the
earth’s resources and over a period of 1.2m years past, its population may have
been less than 10K. At ten thousand
years ago its population had grown from that estimation to 10ml, and then jumping
to some to 7.5 bln. of today. This is a population which has by no means spread
to every corner of the earth but in looking at every easy habitable major land
mass the impact of such expansion is clearly evident. The most impressive rate
of growth has occurred from the 17th century estimated at a world
population of 1bn humans increasing up to 6bn in just 300 years. This over
a period in which there was ‘unlimited’ space and available resources; with
incremental accumulation of knowledge, ingenuity / inventiveness to solve
problems and an enhance application to productive processes, had allowed such rapid
expansions and growth to take place.
This expansion of human activity has promulgated
a variety of specialism to come into play. Civilisation slowly moved from a
wholly dependency on hunter gatherer, nomadic, agriculture, article production,
to large scale manufacture, commerce, services and leisure with a diversity of administrative
functionality to be immersed within it all. Very little of this development was
planned, one might suggest it was just a lucky opportune ‘systemic organic’ drive
with occasionally inflicted setbacks and sporadic force stimulations giving
impetus to overall material progressions for the more aggressively positioned
cultures. It is noted in this, that the spread
of ‘developments’ has not been homogeneous throughout the world nor has the
benefits or wealth been enthusiastically shared, to the extent that there is clearly
an obvious extensive unstable segregation between nations, sectors and
individuals within each country; evident in the observable poverty that
afflicts the majority of the world’s population. A population that does not
have access to the best of a modern society’s current offering, or are they
likely to be able to gain measurable step improvements for the foreseeable
future. With a huge variation of resources acquisition and consumptive capacity
and an unreliable immature foundation for self sustainability, it is quite
possible that the resources that powered development over that past 300 years
will not be as bountiful even over the next 100 years.
One is not alone in laying out the obvious
scenarios that will limit human development over the next 300 years, during
which time there is bound to be an unavoidable collapse in the advancing
inclination of human endeavours. The
dawn of the 21st century has already fired one of its first warnings,
that there is a civilisation impasse arising which is exposing the fragility of
key assumption that underpin the structure of cultures and collective ideas
concurrent with the organised administrative functions that are endemic to the nature of modern
societies.
Although a long time in gestation, the
evidence being amalgamated and interpreted for the recent past ten decades
does, with a degree of certain lobbyist self interest dissent, indicate that
the global environment is shifting at a very fast rate. There is little reason
to be elaborative in listing the well rehearsed aspects of the threatening
problems, suffice to say that a combination of environmental issues are not
progressing swiftly enough to the fore on the political landscape, or are they
taken on at a global level to enlist a unified position of nations responses. There
have been tentative steps with co2 ‘greenhouse’ gas but for the major player
like the US, UK, Russia, China etc there has been resistance to doing too much
too quickly for fear of damaging their economic outlook, reliant as it is on
keeping the market and consumer economy moving to their advantage. In this
context there seems to be a disconnect between the jaunty global financial
market actions and governments being economical to the reality of the ongoing
state of world trades decline after the CC in 2007/8 with the effect of the
creeping lack of resourcefulness of certain elements of population. This
dichotomy may be overriding the certainty of the long term pressing damage
likely from the multifaceted environmental ELE.
All though there is a raising tension of what
the world can produce (raw materials etc.) and the ability to globally consume,
there is a growing mismatch between what is produced and the ability to afford
to consume. Consumerism (Applicable to the vociferous appetite of ‘developed’
nations) is fuelled by overall unremitting debt. Due to the failing of
unmanaged economic systems, the resourcefulness ability is being eroded for
some people and is denying them affluent participation as consumers and an expectation
of equitable social advancement that is moving out of their reach. With technology
productive overcapacity, less people are required to produce goods and un-resourced
people may not acquire consuming goods. There may not even be enough raw
resources ‘too go around’. On this basis it is apparent, being rudimentary,
that the human population growth has outgrown, in its multiplicity, its
usefulness. The world is carrying far too many people, far too many of whom are
barely at a subsistence level, unable to be supported by their own nation and
hardly influenced by the disinterest of global machinations undertaken by the
powerful. At times there is a call for population control by some element of
the affluent west but this is aimed at the less ‘advanced’ corners of the world
and not unreasonably they flash back and draw the obvious accusation that the
problem of diminishing resources and environment degradation have been largely
caused by the effluent profligate west; therefore start there with controls! This
is overlooking the trend in the west of established indigenous individuals, for
the imperativeness of selfish (quality of life?) personnel affluence to produce
a reduction in the birth rate, countered to some extent by non indigenous
resident producing, on average, more offspring’s overriding the indigenous
birth rate but aiding to a desired ‘replacement’ rate. A situation of ‘replacement’
that is not required in undeveloped nations – babies are easy and inexpensive
to produce but very expensive to nurture without capital.
Factually Earths consumable resources are finite;
it is continuous supply vs. demand or constricted demand vs. supply and it is
just a matter of time when resources are diminished and then become too
expensive or rare for general acquisition, recycling or disposal; easy
consumption is forced to be retrenched. Of immediate importance to the growth
of the earth’s population, apart from the inability to distribute self
sustainment and nourishment for the impoverished nations, are the two problems
of energy and water. Everything of this era, throughout the world has a
reliance on the availability of energy driving every electrical and mechanical
artefact; with the exception of very small discrete locations, nowhere is there
any human habitation unencumbered from technical indications indicative to the
current era, to continue this an energy source is required. To this view is the
issue of the deteriorating supply of fresh water, essential for life yet it is
compressing against the population growth of certain nations and with both these
issue there is very little expectation that an uncomplicated solution is
achievable prior to a (probably limited) resource, environmental, energy ELE.
Into this mix of uncertainty is the futurist dream
of some technologist of an application to industry and commerce, for the
arrival of autonomous robots! Discussed in development enclaves, very little practical
planning is being undertaken by the developed nations on the impact or
desirability of progressing onto a all encompassing utility use of robots; this
dream is lacking any formative assessment of what a robot is to be in form,
capacity, limitation, impact, or acceptability in an industrial / commercial /
market consumerist orientated world. To the ambiguous question, what are robots;
there is a limit bench mark indicative with short term use of that word attached
to the term robotics as is applicable to industry.
The use of ‘robots’ in factories has replaced
labour and accelerated the production processes, these robots are an extension of mechanical automation
that has been rolled out un-resisted for years and are programmed to do a task
of programmers biding. They undertake productive tasks that may be mundane,
repetitive, delicate, or dangerous; ‘laboured’ jobs to the limits of their
construction. They may do things faster, with no fatigue, no dissent, no sustenance,
no intelligence or rewards and are absolutely compilable until re-tasked,
damaged or powered off. For the commercial sectors the disembodiment familiarity
of robotics is experienced in the application of computerisation into every
field of human services interactions; all financial sectors, insurance, all
administrative data control, diagnostics, algorithms analysis, ‘back offices’
process etc. to the increasing ubiquitous self service applications previously filled
by the utilisation of intelligent human hands.
This freeing of labour from repetitive
‘mundane’ tasks has not resulted in a greater spread of more affordable leisure
time or disposable incomes. It has shifted the scope of skilled and knowledge based
requirements, disposing of some skill application for simpler labour requirements
and raising specialism for higher knowledge professions. Trade labour, some
customer personal services, large labour intensive jobs in production and
administration has given way to faster more efficient and productive output
with higher profitability, but in doing so labour flexibility is generating
spare labour availability which to some extent has recently, in the west, been opportunistically
used in the creation (for its expansive absorptions) of this flexible resource
by the new ‘Gig’ (1) slave economy via the imposition of doubtful self employed
status for those workers that fall into this growing ‘service’ type economy.
The availability of surplus labour has also driven down the historic trend of
wages keeping pace with intractable inflation (whatever the source) and on some
measures incomes have not advanced in real term for 30 years.
The current drive is to mate up the advancing
computerisation into artificial intelligence and some form of mechanoids that
could be called an autonomous robotic system. There is a vision to have this
thing being at a level of ‘intelligence’ and have ‘programmed’ comprehension;
to have self mobility or at least be within system that can operate more humans
resourced functions. This posits that it will be faster, more reliable, overall
economically efficient with an undetectable interface to humans in output
abilities, exceptionally useful and robust.
For the moment there are a great number of insurmountable
constructive issues to be able to put into operationally a fully functional
independent autonomous ‘intelligent’ robot that can look and mirror a human. Could
there be eventually a robot in humanoid like shape and overall appearance,
really? There is nothing within a current scope that will get close to this
possibility however the continuing attempt to do so is debatable, and seriously
questionable. The complexity involved in the ‘build’ is enormous but of
unquestionable doubt is the immeasurable effect on all unprepared social
constructs. So although it likely to be a long time out for any form of
technical ability to build an imagined, autonomous, mobile, humanoid AI; it
will be possible to create an undetectable static interactive presence,
controlling a realm of functions that the technical age is morphing into. The
prime issue still is, if it were possible to insert sufficient expansive
working parameters for ‘it’ to have all human abilities, (apart from mobility) maybe
at a greater level, does one want it to be more intelligent, more Inventive or
to have senses and ultimately be self aware?
Humans are hardly able to understand their
own motivations and still have great difficult in building relationships with
any that are not fitted within an ‘acceptable’ frame of colour, sex,
nationality, ethnicity, background, social standing, rich or poor. Humans are
not particularly homogeneous, spatially proprioceptive, intelligent or
intuitive either, yes they have the resources of greater knowledge and
information about things, emotions and senses with some comprehension of how
the body and brain work that holds the mind environs but this is far from being
able to transfer the whole human condition to a robotic functionary.
Assume for the moment that autonomous, fully functioning
AI hominoids were available, on par to or superior to a ‘normal’ human, is it
really possible that it would be unconditionally acceptable even on the basis
of having integrated the “robotic laws” and a terminal switch? Given the
uncertainty and survival traits of the human condition, it is unlikely that for
them being in danger of becoming more superfluous and redundant, with no
compensating outlets, that it could be a transitionally smooth state; however
this is the ultimate direction of robotics travel, to have machines carrying
out all ‘mundane’ tasks on demand; a pliable willing undemonstrative slave. The
desire to procure as much as possible within a labour free productive and
service provision businesses environment, is driven by extracting more from
less (driving up profits) and with those displaced, moved from valuable
employment being relegated to thrifty consumers locked out of economic
inclusiveness and encouraged into a burgeoning Gig economy, if they can afford
it.
All the above is just procrastinating fodder
for the future which does contain some unexpressed assured assumptions that may
not match up with an actuality of events. Any foreseeable ELE precursor would
certainly modify options. But for now why go through all that trouble of
technical inventiveness limitation, probably unlikely to be successful, when soon
it will be much easier to replicate a human body either in vitro or via the
usual procreation method and engineer into ‘it’ either limiting adaptable human
features, or enhance it with desired alternative species abilities to be possibly
more durable that suits specific tasks. As they would be wo/man-made,
manufactured by design, in unlimited numbers, cheap to produce and resource sustainable,
they could be seen to be conveniently disposable etc. Of course there would
have to be an orchestrated process of cultural indoctrination of acceptability
in the use of such things, along the lines of “them and us”.
Which then, would be less or more frightening
or dangerous, the manufactured hard material AI robot of fanciful sci-fi dreams
or the soft humanoid roboticised obedient slaves? The unresolved problem as one
might see is that they would require having a bit of shelter, minimally clothed
and economically fed to keep them functioning as one would like and not need overly
investing too much stock care; after all they are disposable.
(1)‘Gig’
Taken from the musical entertainment
field were individual or a group would perform at a function describing it as a
‘gig’. The decision to undertake the gig was entirely under the performers
control and they sometimes played free or were paid a performance rate by the
venue. Often an informal arrangement between both parties and used by some as a
musician hobby outlet, entertainment provider; apart from turning up for the
gig there was usually no ongoing commitments or fiduciary obligations.
© Renot
2005171555

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