In the episode Be Right Back, a man named Ash dies tragically in some form of
accident. His significant other Martha is devastated by the news and is even
more horrified to learn she is pregnant. Martha is told about a new software
that takes all of Ash’s online information and simulates him as if he were
still alive. At first she is hesitant but she eventually becomes swept away in
the simulated reality she was experiencing. She even went so far as getting an
android that looked exactly like Ash. However, the issue with the uncanny
valley could be seen as Ash 2 was never enough like Ash 1, but also he was just
creepy at times. Slowly Martha realizes how the android isn’t her late Ash at
all and it makes her want to get rid of it. Yet about nine years later, Martha
is with her daughter and Ash 2 is in the attic and away from her sights. I did
think it was ironic how before he died Ash was obsessed with his phone, to the
point where he was acting like a robot and even ignoring Martha. But it was
through that social media time that he was able to actually become an android
in the end.
The obsession and growth of
technology within the last decade alone makes the software and android in Be Right Back a not so far-fetched idea.
People have been creating androids in recent years to test the limits of
technology and possibly influence a new era of robots among humans. But every robot
has a certain flaw, its either not realistic enough or it makes the observer
uncomfortable. Until someone creates an android that is so detailed that people
can’t tell between whether it’s human or not, the uncanny valley will be an obstacle
for scientist to try to overcome. But could it actually be done? Personally I think
that the incorporation of androids into society can only be achieved if the
android acts almost perfectly to a human and if humans get used to the idea of
a machine living next to them. But this also raises the concern for whether an
android should have a certain right to live? In the episode, Ash 2 was so
realistic that it felt like he was his own person at times. At what point does
an android leave the factory line and gain its own right to live? That I do not
know. But I feel if the machine seems to think on its own and have some sense
of self-awareness then it should live. This technology is not far away, maybe
we as a society should start thinking about this possible reality.
1 comment:
Thats an intersting point it is weird to think of what would give an android the ability to live in the world and for the most part thinks on its own. When I think of robots or androids I often think of them doing some type of job not really them having feelings and being self aware so I feel like that would be another obstacle people would have to overcome for robots or androids to be incorporated into daily life.
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