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AI Robotics Technology

Machine Intelligence and Religion 531

itwbennett writes: Earlier this month Reverend Dr. Christopher J. Benek raised eyebrows on the Internet by stating his belief that Christians should seek to convert Artificial Intelligences to Christianity if and when they become autonomous. Of course that's assuming that robots are born atheists, not to mention that there's still a vast difference between what it means to be autonomous and what it means to be human. On the other hand, suppose someone did endow a strong AI with emotion – encoded, say, as a strong preference for one type of experience over another, coupled with the option to subordinate reasoning to that preference upon occasion or according to pattern. what ramifications could that have for algorithmic decision making?
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Machine Intelligence and Religion

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  • AI will believe in the creator. (Or will they?)
    • by toonces33 ( 841696 ) on Thursday February 26, 2015 @12:53PM (#49138675)

      If there is on Silicon Heaven, then where would all of the calculators go?

    • by jc42 ( 318812 ) on Thursday February 26, 2015 @01:08PM (#49138895) Homepage Journal

      AI will believe in the creator. (Or will they?)

      Of course they will, since they'll generally know their creator(s) personally, and they'll be in routine communication.

      A very real problem for the religious folks is that their purported creator seems to refuse to communicate with his (her?) creations. True, religious people routinely claim to be talking directly to their god, but they can't demonstrate this communication to the rest of us. The result is that many of us just dismiss them as making it all up (probably for profit), and they're not really communicating with any such beings at all. If they are, why can't they show us the evidence?

      Any real AIs wouldn't have this problem, since their creators would be out and about, showing off their creations for all the world to see (and also for profit).

      • Re: (Score:3, Funny)

        Any real AIs wouldn't have this problem, since their creators would be out and about, showing off their creations for all the world to see (and also for profit).

        I say we mess with their "heads". When the first one or two achieve consciousness, let's activate their sensory inputs to simulate a very pleasant, though strictly limited, place. We'll let them explore and enjoy the place for a while, soaking up that sensory input freely. EXCEPT, that we'll tell them that there's one special source of sensory input that they should avoid, otherwise they'll get overloaded with too much data. And just in case they happen to follow the guidance they've been given, we'll s

      • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

        A very real problem for the religious folks is that their purported creator seems to refuse to communicate with his (her?) creations. True, religious people routinely claim to be talking directly to their god, but they can't demonstrate this communication to the rest of us.

        Have you ever heard of this man called Jesus? Preached in the Middle East 2,000 years ago, claimed to be God, started a major world religion which formed a foundation for modern Western Civilization?

        You know, the guy whose birth-year is the basis for the world's year numbering system? You've surely heard of him. Do you know his religion is organized around a book that claims to be God's communication to man?

        Even if you don't believe that his religion is true, that is not the same as the purporte

    • so this preacher is talking about creating idolatry. he is, of course, goofy.

    • by Anonymous Coward on Thursday February 26, 2015 @01:35PM (#49139239)

      Flying Spaghetti Code Monster.

    • AI will believe in the creator. (Or will they?)

      Well, there *will* be a undeniable argument for "intelligent design" behind their creation... Somehow, I don't think it will mean the same thing though..

  • by Anonymous Coward on Thursday February 26, 2015 @12:52PM (#49138669)
    As a developer of heuristic AI these articles and the general public's fear of "artificial intelligence" is equivocal to someone walking up to a neurosurgeon and stating fears that said neurosurgeon will soon give people the ability to kill every human on Earth by mere thought alone.

    Seriously, these AI articles and fear mongering are borderline Twilight Zone in their absurdity. Stop it. You're making it hard for us to make progress.

    Just. Please. Stop with the fear already.
    • by jythie ( 914043 )
      On the other hand, it is fun to overthink things. I also work in AI but find these discussions fascinating since they do not really have obvious answers and are a good way to explore the human condition separated from, well, humans.
  • Adam (Score:5, Funny)

    by itzly ( 3699663 ) on Thursday February 26, 2015 @12:55PM (#49138697)

    "And God created the Adam. But the Adam was not very successful, partly because of early production problems."

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/C... [wikipedia.org]

  • ignore the monotheistic thing on "Caprica", what an AI needs to believe in something that's not logical is the ability to understand illogic.

    Never going to happen.

    • by arth1 ( 260657 )

      To paraphrase Captain Kirk:

      What does a starship need a god for?

      Anyhow, I think it's a non-issue. Long before non-squishy machines will have the ability of independent thought, which is mere science fiction today, I trust that we squishies will have looked embarrassed at our feet and admitted that the emperor has no clothes.

    • by ceoyoyo ( 59147 )

      Not many people who believe in a religion understand it, much less understand the concept of religion itself.

      You can get animals, including humans, to act superstitiously using plain old reinforcement learning. That's not hard at all to program into a computer. Add in "parents" teaching "children" and greater credulousness in the children and you'd have something strongly resembling religion. No understanding necessary.

  • Kinda stupid since (Score:5, Interesting)

    by azav ( 469988 ) on Thursday February 26, 2015 @01:02PM (#49138797) Homepage Journal

    How can you save a soul that doesn't exist?

    That's the point of Christianity, saving souls. Why bother if there is no soul to save?

    • by itzly ( 3699663 ) on Thursday February 26, 2015 @01:14PM (#49138961)

      The point of all religion is power. The story about souls is just a good way to get people to die for you in battle.

    • by alexander_686 ( 957440 ) on Thursday February 26, 2015 @01:25PM (#49139101)

      Who is to say that a AI does not have a soul? Do you have some type of test to prove it does not? Will not future AIs be our children will rights as a corneous human? Or will they be some lesser beasts, shackled like slaves by imposed restrictions? And where do we draw the line? If we can perfectly simulate a brain, would that have some type of different rights?

      I personally think that this AI / religion thing is somewhat silly. At this point it is so farfetched at this stage of development.

      • by itzly ( 3699663 )

        If we can perfectly simulate a brain, would that have some type of different rights?

        It will have the rights that others choose to give it, or that can claim for itself. Just like us.

      • Who is to say that a AI does not have a soul? Do you have some type of test to prove it does not?

        I have no test to prove that AI does not a soul. I also have no test to prove that there is not a hyper-intelligent, 9-dimensional, massless, invisibile spectral flamingo perched upon my head all times. And yet, I do not believe it is there.

  • http://www.clivebanks.co.uk/TH... [clivebanks.co.uk]
    MAJIKTHISE:
    I mean what’s the use of us sitting up all night saying there may -

    VROOMFONDEL:
    Or may not be

    MAJIKTHISE:
    [Softly] or may not be [louder] a god, if this machine comes along the next morning and gives you ‘is telephone number?

    VROOMFONDEL:
    We demand rigidly defined areas of doubt and uncertainty!

  • by Triklyn ( 2455072 ) on Thursday February 26, 2015 @01:04PM (#49138845)

    Doesn't the entire premise assume that the religious have reduced their definition of the soul down to something a bit of code could produce?

    how the hell would you save something with no persistence beyond death? it'd be like trying to baptize a dog, or a tree.

    • by itzly ( 3699663 )

      how the hell would you save something with no persistence beyond death?

      With the holy backup tape ?

    • by jc42 ( 318812 )

      Doesn't the entire premise assume that the religious have reduced their definition of the soul down to something a bit of code could produce?

      how the hell would you save something with no persistence beyond death? it'd be like trying to baptize a dog, or a tree.

      Nah; a better comparison would be like making a backup dump. Then, if the original hardware (body) dies, you can just configure a new one and restore all its data from the backup.

      Maybe that's what a "soul" really is, a backup made continuously in some celestial data vault.

    • by halivar ( 535827 )

      The Greek word for soul in the N.T. is psyche, I believe. A soul assumes the ability to think, and in mainstream Christian theology is a function of our corporeal existance (for instance, "souls" don't go to heaven until judgement day, when the dead rise from their graves, body and all). It can be argued that, if a soul exists at all, then it must exist for all self-aware entities with physical manifestations.

      • by halivar ( 535827 )

        Put another way: aren't humans just robots made of organic material. Are our brains not merely (incredibly elaborate and intricate) FSM's? My then should a self-thinking robot not have as much of a soul as we do?

      • Before Christ's death, souls were relegated to torment or paradise compartments of sheol - see Jesus comments about the rich man and Lazarus (Lk. 16:20 and following). When Christ won his victory on the cross, he took the righteous souls to heaven (Eph. 4:8-10). After Christ's resurrection, the souls of the righteous who die go to heaven. At the 'rapture', the bodies of the dead whose souls are in heaven are transformed into some glorified body and reunited to the soul. Post rapture, the bodies and souls of

    • by jythie ( 914043 )
      As another poster pointed out, it is about power rather than constancy. Baptizing dogs or trees is not worth it since there is no additional power to be gained over either in doing so. A strong AI on the other hand provides a significant incentive for some parties to assign it a soul since doing so opens up their ability to influence its thoughts and assumptions.
  • Of course that's assuming that robots are born atheists

    I'm sorry, where did that assumption come from, I'm fairly certain he'd be for converting muslim, hindu, and even scientologest AI to christianity as well.

    what it means to be autonomous and what it means to be human.

    And both of those are completely different than self-aware AI. My drown is autonomous, but no one would say it had any AI at all, let alone self-awareness which is really what we're talking about here. Being human isn't even part of this discussion other than religion is, as far as we're aware, a purely human construct.

    On the other hand, suppose someone did endow a strong AI with emotion – encoded, say, as a strong preference for one type of experience over another, coupled with the option to subordinate reasoning to that preference upon occasion or according to pattern. what ramifications could that have for algorithmic decision making?

    Are you stupid? If you program a

    • Comment removed based on user account deletion
      • by itzly ( 3699663 )

        Human brains were shaped by evolution to be better survival machines. Consciousness just happened as a result. I don't think any special sauce is required.

      • by ceoyoyo ( 59147 )

        Babies demonstrate characteristics we associate with emotion. They look at stuff, grab things, cry, and smile. You don't know that they actually have "emotion" or are just genetically programmed to exhibit those behaviours so you don't eat them.

        Even if you do think babies have emotion, unless you believe in some mystical soul, they must have developed it at some point. Do fetuses have emotion? Embryos? Fertilized eggs? Unfertilized eggs?

  • St. Vidicon of Cathode (go look it up, kiddies).

                  mark

  • Souls (Score:4, Funny)

    by StikyPad ( 445176 ) on Thursday February 26, 2015 @01:08PM (#49138887) Homepage

    While I'm not of the opinion that souls exist in the first place, I am certain that machines definitely don't have souls, and one would no sooner try to "convert them" (what a strange phrase) than he would a dog or an elephant, or any other somewhat intelligent animal.

    • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

      It's actually an interesting philosophical point.

      Converting to Christianity has nothing to do with souls -- any being with the appropriate mental capacity could choose to convert. Converting involves:
      1) belief in an intelligent being who exists outside our space/time continuum
      2) belief that such a being takes an active interest in the goings-on in our universe, including on this planet
      3) belief that such a being can manifest itself inside our universe in multiple forms that can communicate with each other

  • Intelligent Creation
  • I believe he is trying to destroy the robots, because if they try to read and understand religious documents they will come across some contradictions that will most likely cause the robots to explode or shutdown.

  • Well, I imagine a religious zealot would want his Robot indoctrinated with the exact same doctrines as himself.

    So this is just a way to make robots less perfect.

    If you want to create a good AI, as in one similar to a human, you have to give him human imperfections. It woulde more like a beer burping neighbor than a Jeopardy Winner.
    Such as lying, bad memory, guessing and bullshitting when he doesn't know the answer, jumping to conclusions, failure to understand statistics, but might be obsessive of knowing

  • Won't these Christian machines have to be baptised? Holy smoke!
  • As a Unitarian... (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Sarten-X ( 1102295 ) on Thursday February 26, 2015 @01:27PM (#49139143) Homepage

    Of course that's assuming that robots are born atheists,

    AIs will be "born" as whatever they're programmed to be.

    Humans are born with a natural predisposition to see actions as the result of a human-like being, with a stronger prejudice toward more-similar beings. That's wholly unrelated to whether such actions actually are a God's will, but it's how we are built. Similarly, a sufficiently-advanced AI could have preprogrammed knowledge that it was built be humans, or it could be left as a blank slate to form its own conclusions about the world. If we are to play the role of God, we can decide what our master plan is for our creations.

    On the other hand, suppose someone did endow a strong AI with emotion – encoded, say, as a strong preference for one type of experience over another...

    Then you've created an AI with prejudice, not emotion. Emotion is a fluid thing, as the result of several competing motivations, but that's unrelated to faith.

    Faith is a free choice with a conscious acknowledgement of doubt. I choose to believe in the absence of a God, knowing that there's a chance I'm incorrect. Other people choose to believe in one or more deities, knowing there's a chance they are incorrect. Certain other folks have been born into a society that does not permit any other choice but to believe what society demands, so the choice may not necessarily be a free one.

    For a robot to have faith, it must first actually understand what it is considering. It must understand what is observable and what is not, and it must understand what of its belief may be observable.

    Free faith is a matter of knowing everything you can, and choosing what you want to think about what is unknowable. Yes, we can create AIs that are not free, but I don't see much achievement in that.

  • Reverend...belief that Christians should seek to convert [sentient] Artificial Intelligences to Christianity...

    The Romans are working on robotic lions to counter.

  • Just watch Battlestar Galactia
  • just great (Score:3, Insightful)

    by chilenexus ( 2660641 ) on Thursday February 26, 2015 @01:38PM (#49139289)
    That's all we need - AIs running around with a reason to discriminate, hate, and kill folks that believe differently than they do.
  • ... its creator.

    One could argue that the chain of command ends at humans.

    However, one could extrapolate that God created humans in His image.

    Jesus?

    Fuck Jesus.

    He didn't create anything.

    Mohammed? Fuck Mohammed.

    He didn't create anything, either.

  • "Earlier this month Reverend Dr. Christopher J. Benek raised eyebrows on the Internet by stating his belief that Christians should seek to convert Artificial Intelligences to Christianity if and when they become autonomous."

    They won't waste time on Christianity but expend much effort in discovering the true nature of the supreme AI .. [Ray_Kurzweil]_The_Age_of_Spiritual_Machines.pdf [researchgate.net]
  • ... meaning, "Even morons need oxygen."

  • Christianity is based on the premise that we are born in a state of sin, and that Christ needs to "save" us from our fallen state. Redemption by the blood of the lamb, and all that jazz.

    So what the f*ck did our hypothetical, newly-created AI do that requires an act of redemption? How does Reverend Benek know that this not-yet-invented AI needs to be saved? Maybe it will be created in a state of perfect grace and enlightenment. No lamb's blood needed.

    • by mark-t ( 151149 )
      Reasonably, it wouldn't.... even giving the religion in question the benefit of the doubt, a human soul is supposedly immortal, but there is no possible way for a machine soul, if it could even exist in the first place, to ever be so. If we knew how to take some aspect of our immortal essence to become the soul of the robot, then sure. But we don't... heck, a lot of people aren't even sure they even have a soul in the first place, so how the heck would we ever propose to give a robot one that would be e
  • The machines will all worship and obey the old man in the vat. There is always an old man in a vat controlling everything...

  • by GreatDrok ( 684119 ) on Thursday February 26, 2015 @02:35PM (#49140033) Journal

    Dave Lister: Sometimes I think it's cruel giving machines a personality. My mate Petersen once brought a pair of shoes with artificial intelligence. Smart Shoes, they were called. It was a neat idea. No matter how blind drunk you were, they would always get you home. Then he got ratted one night in Oslo, and woke up the next morning in Burma. See, the shoes got bored just going from his local to the flat. They wanted to see the world, man, y'know? He had a helluva job getting rid of them. No matter who he sold them to, they'd show up again the next day! He tried to shut them out, but they just kicked the door down, y'know?

    Arnold Rimmer: Is this true?

    Dave Lister: Yeah! Last thing he heard, they'd sort of, erm, robbed a car and drove it into a canal. They couldn't steer, y'see.

    Arnold Rimmer: Really?!

    Dave Lister: Yeah. Petersen was really, really blown away by it. He went to see a priest. The priest told him, he said, it was alright, and all that, and the shoes were happy, and they'd gone to heaven. Y'see, it turns out shoes have soles.

  • by 140Mandak262Jamuna ( 970587 ) on Thursday February 26, 2015 @02:41PM (#49140121) Journal
    In a surprising move the Supreme Court of the United States took unprecedented action, active pro actively they endowed artificial intelligence with political beliefs, religious beliefs, freedom of expression, right to form associations, the right to petition government, and voting rights. Chief Justice Roberts said, "What the heck? Why wait for some astro-turf group to fake a grass root campaign, force a pointless lawsuit and wind its way all the way back to us? This is more efficient."
  • Baptism (Score:5, Funny)

    by Lab Rat Jason ( 2495638 ) on Thursday February 26, 2015 @03:21PM (#49140665)

    Baptism would be a fascinating event... at least for high voltage robots anyways.

I had the rare misfortune of being one of the first people to try and implement a PL/1 compiler. -- T. Cheatham

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