Humanoid Robots: Can they be concidered conscious, human, and deserve rights as humans do?

Essay by lashes5050College, UndergraduateA+, November 2003

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Our brains are the most impressive achievement of evolution we know of. They are several million times more powerful than anything created by man. Our brains create our sense of self, our consciousness. This very personal part of each of us is created by neural networks in our skulls, a concept so hard to believe that a large percentage of the population instead believe our "self" is generated by a supernatural soul. It is now 2043, and regardless of belief, we know enough about biological brains to build digital ones. In fact, the local university has already discovered this and created "Rodney." Rodney is a humanoid with life like plastic skin, capable of conversing on many subjects, can play the piano, displays emotion like behavior, and can solve difficult math problems. The controversial question revolving around Rodney is whether he should be considered conscious. And if so, would this allow him to have rights as people do in society? In order to evaluate this situation, our definitions and terms of what consciousness and personhood should be made clear.

I regard consciousness as the ability to be aware of the feelings you get when you experience something. Personhood is not based on origin or composition, but rather having thoughts, feelings, and morals. In this paper, I will prove that Rodney can be considered a conscious person, and should be give rights in our society.

A humanoid robot can be considered conscious in the sense that it is capable of displaying emotions. The qualities of anger, sadness, love, happiness, jealously etc., are each distinct emotions that humans experience. These emotions are correlated with behavioral displays to what a person at the moment would be feeling inside. Humans are only aware of what each other are feeling by their outward show, or evidence...