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On the psychology of Artificial Intelligence

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hedgie:
May might have been after a bit of Hanners' probable trust-fund in order to become a fighter jet in exchange for protecting her. 

explicit:

--- Quote from: hedgie on 06 Feb 2015, 21:57 ---May might have been after a bit of Hanners' probable trust-fund in order to become a fighter jet in exchange for protecting her.

--- End quote ---

It did seem more enamored at first. I do feel if anything would adhere to creationism it'd be robots/AI. Seeing as they were clearly created by someone.

Is it cold in here?:
It would be just like the human practice of ancestor worship.

ReindeerFlotilla:
They probably believe whatever catches their fancy. Just like people.

Exhibit A: There's no logical reason for anything Pintsize does.

Exhibit B: When Momo got mad at Marigold, she left in a huff, went to Hanners's place and sought physical comfort. She's a robot. Logically none of that was necessary.

Exhibit C: Station's treatment of Lt. Potter and the need for him to receive two lessons on morality.

Conclusion: Marten is right to think of Pintsize as just a little guy. That's what he is. QC AI are capable of the full range of irrational human behavior. That's why Robot Jail exists. They do things because it feels right. They use reason the same way we do--as a supplement and enhancement to emotional decision making. It's unlikely that they approach religion any differently.

It seems likely that the differences between AI and human religion stem from other capabilities, like distributed devotion.

It's likely that some AI have gone their own way, religiously. But it's also likely that some have joined whatever churches came recruiting. That's what meat-people would do.

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