Poll: Do Robots Have Souls?

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Dr.A

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Jun 3, 2010
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This question is making me consider what I think a soul actually is, and the only thing I can really wrap my head around is it being your consciousness. When I die, where will my consciousness go? It's possible for me to comprehend me losing my body, but my consciousness is something I've never been without.

So, unless this robot has consciousness, which I do not believe it does, then I would have to believe that it does not have a soul.
 

TheDoctor455

Friendly Neighborhood Time Lord
Apr 1, 2009
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Boom129 said:
TheDoctor455 said:
No they don't.
But I don't believe in souls at all to begin with.
The soul is just a metaphor.
Fine then,
do robots have a BLEEDING metaphor then?
Anything can have or be a metaphor you know.

Robots could be a metaphor for commercialism or the over-use/abuse of technology, depending on the circumstance.

Now, if you are asking if I think robots can ever become self-aware... yes... if technology along that line continues far enough, I believe that's possible.
 

Seives-Sliver

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Jun 25, 2008
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Self awareness=soul
being able to make own decisions=soul
choosing A from B=soul
Doing anything for a Klondike Bar= Giving up your soul.
 

zombiejoe

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Sep 2, 2009
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Depends. If it was made simply to do one job, not think, or have emotion, or anything, then it has no soul. I believe that if it has capability to think on some level, has wants and needs, then it could have a soul.

:D
 

NeutralDrow

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Mar 23, 2009
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interspark said:
I was reading Negima earlier (fellow fans will get the reference)
YES, SHE DOES. I WILL BROOK NO ARGUMENT.

...sorry, I don't have anything to contribute to the thread, just wanted to satisfy my inner Chachamaru fanboy.

Really, though, you should have asked if robots have Buddha Nature. Just for grins.
 

DanielBrown

Dangerzone!
Dec 3, 2010
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I don't believe souls exist so no, I don't think robots would have souls even if they were copies of humans.
 

SoranMBane

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May 24, 2009
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If by "soul" we mean "a sense of self and a rational mind deserving of the same respect and individual rights as humans," then, yes, intelligent robots do indeed have (or, at least, can have) "souls."
 

quantumsoul

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Jun 10, 2010
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I define having a soul as having consciousness and being able to experience your existence.

Then the robot has a soul. It's possible to simulate how a conscious being would act making it soulless in that case.

Such a thing would be no more possible to prove than it is to prove a soul in another person. I'd take the safe route and treat the robot like it were a person.
 

Sn1P3r M98

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May 30, 2010
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Well, if souls are real, then I'd say robots don't have them. They're not self aware, and they're machines.
 

Vykrel

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Feb 26, 2009
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no, but maybe someday in the future if we end up incorporating actual human consciences with robots, (kind of like the AI in Halo) you could say then that they have souls.
 

manythings

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Nov 7, 2009
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Realitycrash said:
manythings said:
Realitycrash said:
manythings said:
Realitycrash said:
manythings said:
Flight was regarded as a fever dream until there was a plan. The idea of dark matter is born of arrogance. According to the equations the universe hasn't enough mass to account for the gravity it would take to keep it from firing off into eternity so instead of trying to figure out what was wrong with their hypothesis they invented an unverifiable X-factor to show that they were right all along. It's non-sense, they might aswell have blamed goblins for it. Dark Matter is just a new version of Phlogiston.
Actually, Einstein conceived Dark Matter in order to fix a problem he had with his Theory of Special Relativity. Then he regretted it and called it the greatest blunder of his career.
Annnnnd around fifty years later, when they pulled the equations and realized that SOMETHING had to fill the damn void, Dark Matter actually made sense.
It isn't proven, but it's a damn better hypothesis than Phlogiston (though Phlogiston is awesome).
There's a solution to everything in the Universe. Neat, plausible and wrong.

Phlogiston fits in the exact same way dark matter does, it accounts for something perfectly. You can't see it, scan for it, no-one has made any articially or sampled any natural source but honest it's real. I also have an invisible, non-corporeal spaceship in my garden... but you can't come over and check.
Dark Matter might be wrong, but everything else is wronger. Get my point? It's the most plausible theory we have..SO FAR.
I don't have a problem with the hypothesis as long as it is treated as an hypothesis, but it is treated as real. It can't be proven but it isn't considered an X-factor anymore, it's considered the explanation that isn't true YET. It prejudices any data when there is considered a seet outcome, the data will be twisted to fit the hypothesis rather than the other way around. It's dangerous and every day it continues it sets us back.
When has anyone ever said that its a fact? They just treat it as a plausible theory, the MOST plausible so far, and thus base most (but not all) of their experiments around this theory. That's how we do science, y0.
It's not the most plausible, it's the simplest and most popular. Dark Matter is a single component that makes all the ducks line up in a single perfect row but that's irrelevant if it's still wrong. When a thing has no real evidence then you can't base practical information on it because you're automatically prejudicing your results to fit the idea. For all anyone knows there a five, ten or even 100 factors at play that we don't yet understand. Dark Matter just has a really good name and solid rep, that's it.
 

Nopodop

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Jan 2, 2011
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I say no. But it would probably have some kind of metal boot for a foot so that boot has a sole.