May 19, 2007: Shopping at Whole Foods

I had to get up this morning and work for an hour or so remotely for the office so I didn’t get to go to the gym absolutely first thing in the morning like I am supposed to do.

Dominica went with me to the gym this morning. This is her third time going this week! I did forty minutes today and then we came back to the apartment for our lunch of egg whites and broccoli that we ate while watching Arrested Development.

We went grocery shopping this afternoon to Whole Foods.  This was my first time at Whole Foods and I was really impressed.  The selection was awesome and they have a huge selection of organic produce and good fish and a lot of items that we have been unable to find in other places like clotted cream and quinoa.  The one thing that I don’t really like is that they are really big on organic foods which are often better than foods not-labeled organic but the entire organic labeling system is a scam as all plants are organic and all plants actually consume is inorganic (except for CO2 from the air or in water) and labeling things as organic or inorganic is incredibly misleading and designed to be so.  The purest, safest produce is made completely inorganically.  Organic processes are more likely to require pesticides and fertilizes and will attract more pests and diseases.  The entire system is design to fool the population who remember nothing from high school chemistry and understand nothing about botany or agriculture – which is almost everyone.  But high prices for organic food is where the money is.  (This isn’t to say that a lot of food labeled organic isn’t great – just that the labeling and marketing system is complete bunk.  Plants eat salt and nothing else.  Salt is not organic.  Period.)

We spent the evening relaxing.  Not much to report for today.

Weight Lost So Far: 8.5lbs.

May 18, 2007

I managed to do forty minutes on the elliptical machine in the gym this morning before heading off to the office. I am slowly getting there. I hope to be able to do forty-five minutes twice a day by Monday. That is my goal for this week.

In science news today, astronomers believe that they have discovered a plant with a high likelihood of being “earth like” in size, temperature and composition. The planet is only twenty light-years away from Earth which means that a journey of just forty to fifty years could get us there if modern engine technology pans out. This is the best opportunity yet for life as we know it to potentially exist in space besides ourselves or for us to put life onto. The planet is expected to be tidally locked with one side burnt and continuously facing the sun and one side frozen and always in darkness with a temperate zone existing along the band of continuous twilight. In a tidally locked planet of this nature it is also expected that the dynamics between the light and dark sides of the planet would cause high winds that would help to regulate the planet’s temperature.

Today was moderately busy at work.  Nothing out of the ordinary.  Dad is pretty sure that he has managed to sell the leather couches that I have had since Josh and I got our first apartment in Greece back in the ’90s.  They were awesome Natuzzi leather couches.  They were $3,000 when I first bought them!  That was a fortune back then.  They were the first furniture that I owned and were a treasured possession.  They got a lot of use too.  The moved with me from Greece to Ithaca (three different apartments there) and then to Geneseo.  They were put into storage two months ago and we really don’t see much chance of Dominica and I needing them again any time soon.  It just makes more sense to sell them.  Dominica has never been all that thrilled with the fact that they are paprika anyway.  The colour was great – spicing up the drab apartment that Josh and I first had but now they are difficult to match to anything.  Those couches have been my primary furniture for a third of my life!  I can’t picture the apartment in Greece without imagining sinking into that comfortable leather and watching the awful 56″ rear-projection television that we used there.

It is Friday and as I often am I am stuck at the office quite late.  I am hoping to have a chance to leave by seven.  It is going to be a short night.  Dominica has promised to go to the health club again with me tonight.  She is currently finishing off the junk food that we have in the apartment and then, next week, she will start onto the South Beach Diet again.

Weight Lost So Far: 8lbs

On Sentience

“The question is not, ‘Can they reason?’ nor, ‘Can they talk?’ but, ‘Can they suffer?'” – Jeremy Bentham

Any discussion of the ethics of Artificial Intelligence is muddied by a social misunderstanding of the conceptual underpinnings of intelligence itself. Wikipedia defines Intelligence “a property of mind that encompasses many related mental abilities, such as the capacities to reason, plan, solve problems, think abstractly, comprehend ideas and language, and learn. Although intelligence is sometimes viewed quite broadly, psychologists typically regard the trait as distinct from creativity, personality, character, knowledge, or wisdom.” What is clearly lacking from intelligence are concepts such as self-awareness, feeling and desire. Intelligence itself refer to any of myriad computational processes. Common examples include playing chess, pattern matching, path determination, process optimization, etc.

Because creating decision system on computers is such a dedicated field of study a term has been applied to the entire domain that we know as “Artificial Intelligence” or AI. AI is not a study with the intent of making computers feel, become self aware, have desires or become human like in some other manner. AI is not related to robotics any more than metallurgy is related to robots. A child’s chess program utilizes AI to play chess, for example. A robot may or may not. Most robots today have no AI at all but use simple programs controlling movements.

In reality there have never been any serious ethical questions involving AI. AI is extremely straight-forward to anyone with a basic understanding of computers, computational mechanics and/or programming. AI simply refers to complex decision making algorithms that could be implemented through mechanical means or even on paper. The results of AI will be identical every time given the same set of inputs (there is a field of AI research that uses randomized input which is quite interesting but randomization is not sentience.)

The ethical questions arise when people begin to consider the issues involved in bestowing sentience upon a machine. It is artificial sentience (aka artificial consciousness) that science fiction often confuses with the real world study of AI. Wikipedia defines sentience as “possession of sensory organs, the ability to feel or perceive, not necessarily including the faculty of self-awareness. The possession of sapience is not a necessity.”

Once sentience comes into play we must begin to consider the question of when a mechanical creation moves from being a machine into being a life form. This will prove to be an extremely difficult challenge as sentience is nearly impossible to define and much more difficult to test for. Scientist and philosophers have long considered the puzzle of determining sentience but no clear answer has been found. I propose, however, that sentience will not and cannot happen through happenstance as many people outside of the computer science community often believe. Sentience is not a byproduct of “thinking quickly” but is a separate thing all together. For example, a computer in the future could easily possess “intelligence” far exceeding that of a human but the computer, regardless of the speed of its processors, the size of its memory or the efficiency and scope of its AI algorithms will not suddenly change into a different type of machine and become sentient.

Sentience does not refer, as we have seen, to “fast” or “advanced” AI but is a discrete concept that we have not yet fully defined. More importantly we have not yet discovered conceptually a means by which to recreate such a state programmatically. Perhaps computational logic as we know it today is unable to contain sentience and a more fundamental breakthrough will need to be made. I feel that it is extremely unlikely that such a breakthrough can be made before a more complete understanding of current, biological sentience can be comprehended and explained.

Should sentience become an achievable goal in the future which it very well may we will suddenly face a new range of ethical questions that are only beginning to be touched upon from areas such as genetic research, abortion rights and cloning. For the first time as a species humans would face the concept of “creating life” which is unmatched in its complexity from all other modern ethical life questions.

The first ethical challenge would be in setting a sentience threshold. Simply this can be defined as “when does life begin?” At point in the making of a sentient being does it become sentient? Obviously in most creation processes involving sentience a human-made machine will be “off” and non-sentient during its creation process and sentient once it is “turned on”. More practically we need to set a threshold that decides when sentience has been achieved. This measurement would obviously have ramifications outside the world of artificial sentience research as a sentience measurement would begin to categorize existing life as well. Few would argue that amoeba are non-sentient and that dogs are sentient but where between the two does the line fall?

Already we are beginning to see countries, especially in Europe, beginning to create laws governing sentient beings. In recent years penalties for torturous crimes against highly intelligent animals have been increased significantly in an attempt to recognize pain and suffering as being unethical when inflicted unnecessary upon sentient beings regardless of their humanity. Better definitions of sentience and the rights of sentient beings need to be defined. Humans often see specialism as a deciding factor between rights but this line may become far more blurry if artificial sentience succeeds as well as many hope that it will.

Many, if not most, interested in the advancement of artificial sentience are truly interested in the further prospect of artificial sapience. If artificial sapience is truly achieved and a clear set of rights are not in place for all sentient beings we risk horrifying levels of discrimination that could easily include disagreements over rights to life, liberty and property. But unlike non-human biological sentient beings currently existing we may be faced with a “species” of artificially sentient or sapient beings capable of comprehending discrimination and possibly capable of organizing and insisting upon those rights – most likely violently as the only example of sapient behaviour that they will have to mimic will be one that potentially did not honour their own “rights of person.”

Artificially sentient beings, capable of feeling pain, loss and comprehending their own persistence, must be treated as we would each other. Humanity cannot, in good consciousness, treat those that are different from us with a significantly reduced set of basic rights. We have, throughout our history, seen animals as humanity’s “playthings” there for our amusement, food and research but this practice alone could create a rift between us and an artificially sentient or sapient culture. A hierarchy of values by species – humans have more rights than dogs, dogs more than mice, mice more than snakes – will clearly not be seen favourably by a “species” that is capable of comprehending these shifts in value in the same way that we do. We have never faced the harsh reality of direct observation and interpretation of our actions and because of this much of our behaviour is likely to be questionable to an outside observer – especially one who can see our behaviour as forming the basis for discrimination against any being that can be labeled as “different.”

Human history has shown us to be poorly prepared for accepting rapidly those that we see as “different.” This is not unique to any single group of people. Almost all groups of humans have, at one time or another, treated another group of people as “non-human” or without fundamental rights – often by classifying the offended people as alien or “non-human.” Slavery, discrimination and genocide are horrible blights on the record of our species. Our collective maturity may need a long growth period before it can handle, on a societal level, another species – artificial or otherwise – with human-like intelligence in a reasonable manner.

Humans have a long road ahead of them before they are ready to face a world with artificially sentient beings of their own creation. We also face the same problem should we ever discover, or be discovered by, another race of sapient creatures. If these sapient creatures were significantly different from us would we be prepared to treat them equitably and would they see us as being capable of doing so considering the treatment of sentient beings that we share a planet with now?

If we do manage to create a sentient being we take on a new role for which, I believe, we are poorly prepared. By creating a new “life form” we suddenly take on the role of creator – at least in the immediate sense. We must assume that there is a certain responsibility in creating a new sentient being and perhaps this will include bestowing upon it a purpose.

Of course the question arises “Is it ethical to ‘create’ a new sentience?” While dangerous in its implications I believe that the answer is a resounding yes. If such a feat can be achieved what possible arguments can exist against the creation of “life”? Is it unethical for humans to have been created? Do we feel that we would have been better off never having existed? Off course we don’t. Without the creation of life as we know it we could not even contemplate ethics. I idea that life itself is unethical is absurd to any living creation bestowed as we are with an inherent value in self-preservation.

What sentience will despair its own creation? While possible it is unlikely. A true sentience – one that can experience happiness and sadness – will surely pursue happiness. Situation may instigate despair but existence will not.

Perhaps the more potent question is: “If we possess the ability to create new life – do we really have the right to deny its creation?” Did God question whether or not he “should” create the world or did he create it because he “could?” While this question may go unanswered I believe that it gives us a glimpse into the situation in a unique way. If we have been endowed with the ability not just to live but to create do we not then have an obligation to our own creator to expand upon our inherent drive to reproduce by taking the next step and actively producing. Is this not the next, logical step in our role as the sapient member of our sentient society?

However we must consider a responsibility previously unacknowledged. Being a coexistent member of a society with multiple sapient members is one scenario and the ethics are relatively clear. We have tackled the issues throughout history and while we often did not follow our own codes of ethics we did know the difference between ethical and unethical behaviour – we simply struggled to behave as we knew that we should. But in a society with distinct sapient members in which one is the creator of the other I believe that there is additional responsibility within the creators.

It is easy to think of a child species or sentient being as being “as a child” unto mankind but our “artificial children” will be more than that. This is a new species that will look to us not just for guidance but for answers. It will be our role to bestow a purpose upon this new sentience. It will be for us to guide and nurture and to provide. The role is not a simple one nor is it an easy one but the rewards may be greater than mankind has ever experienced before.

By creating sentience and, in time we hope, sapience are we not providing for ourselves and for our “artificial children” an opportunity to go beyond the scope of our limited existence? In the creation of sentience we may realize a purpose hitherto unfulfilled in the annals of humanity – the need to not just grow as an individual but to grow as a citizen of the universe. And while our “artificial children” will not be – or it seems unlikely to be – related to us in any biological way there is a potential that they may share our hopes and dreams, our ideals and our goals and be able to carry us to new worlds and into the future. Perhaps artificial sentience is the ultimate legacy of mankind.

Can mankind be the creator of its own succession?

Ethics in Artificial Intelligence Research

As computing power continues to increase at a rapid pace mankind is beginning to ponder the ethics questions involved in the possible creation of artificial intelligence. If we succeed at creating artificial intelligence or AI then we have effectively created life to some degree and we must suddenly face many challenges that we have never had to deal with previously.

To many the issues are obvious – if we create a sentient being then we take on the role of god and are the creators to whom it looks not only as parents but as spiritual creators. What rights does an intelligent artificial being have? At what threshold does a machine become sentient? Do we even have the right to create a new life-form? Do we have the right not to if we have the ability? [1] The questions are many and the answers are few. This creates potential hazards in the AI research domain today.

I believe that many of these questions may be too broad to pose at this time. Conceptually artificial intelligence means creating a machine that is “intelligent” in the same way that humans and animal life is intelligent. People often use the term “self aware.” A being that thinks, senses, contemplates, desires, realizes and persists but not indefinitely. This is surely a lofty goal – a goal so lofty and complex that it is beyond our current scope to even discuss rationally in a scientific setting. Before being able to serious debate ethical issues surrounding something of this magnitude which would surely be mankind’s crowning achievement we must first be able to define artificial intelligence and, indeed, life.

Society in general has learned about AI concepts from Hollywood – an industry not known for its deep understanding of technology or science. In an industry that cannot faithfully represent common, everyday technology concepts such as email, logins, web pages, etc. it is somewhat unreasonable to assume that they would be able to comprehend advanced computer science concepts. And yet society who, in general, know that Hollywood cannot faithfully reproduce the email experience still believe that AI is defined in movies like I, Robot and AI. People generally believe that AI is magic, meaning that machines become self aware, that machines learn on their own and that machines can do something that computer scientists cannot even explain let alone intentionally build into them (what Schank refers to quite accurately as the “Gee Whiz” factor.)

But in the realm of modern academia and research the term artificial intelligence is none of the things that people generally associate with AI conceptually. [2] AI is not, as it is currently defined, even approaching creating life and even creating non-life self-awareness but is instead a scientific approach to “human like” problem solving in extremely limited domains. For example, modern video games use very simple algorithms for non-player characters to do “path finding”. These algorithms simply compare multiple routes from one source to one destination and determine which one is “best” or sometimes simply determine one possible route without any optimization. These systems could easily be represented on paper and few people would confuse paper with a self-aware mechanical being.

The reality is that today AI is thriving but is not what people commonly believe it to be. AI is a serious scientific and mathematical pursuit involving knowledge systems, complex logic solving, video games, etc. but it is not an attempt, not within the foreseeable future to even attempt, to model true life-like intelligence. [3] The term is very misleading and this is having a catastrophic effect on the public’s perceptions of the field. But work is progressing steadily and research is ongoing. AI is in use in our everyday lives and no one has ever proposed any serious moral dilemma with microwaves intelligently deciding when popcorn is done or for Age of Empires figuring out how to move sprites around a “stone wall” instead of knocking directly into it.

In time, perhaps, by thorough research of underlying logic systems we may eventually come to have some understanding of what it would mean to truly create a sentient machine. But that day is a long, long way off and could easily never come. Until then even considering to propose that ethics may come into play as to whether or not we should continue to build what are simply “more complex” traditional machines is utter foolishness and will continue to be, as it has been, the domain of the uneducated and gullible to believe Hollywood and hype rather than common sense, research and reality.

[1] Hayes, Patrick and McCarthy, John. Some Philosophical Problems from the Standpoint of Artificial Intelligence. Stanford, 1969. Retrieved May 11, 200y from: The University of Maine

[2] Schank, Roger C. Where’s the AI? Northwest University, 1991. Retrieved on May 11, 2007 from Google Cache at: Google Cache

[3] Humphrys, Mark. AI is possible… but AI won’t happen: The future of Artificual Intelligence. Jesus College, August, 1997. Retrieved May 11, 2007 from: Jesus College

[4] Brooks, Rodney. Intelligence without representation. September, 1987. Retrieved May 11, 2007 from: UCLA

[This paper was written as an ungraded assignment for a class that I took at the Rochester Institute of Technology and is crippled by the essay constraints of the class. It is not my normal format.]

May 17, 2007

Finally Oreo and I get a real doggie-daddy day! We have really missed each other recently. So I slept in a little this morning and skipped my morning workout so that Oreo and I could get some time together before the work day started and so that my body could heal a little after working out three times recently. But I still plan to go work out tonight. I can’t completely take the day off!

The weather is really nice in Newark today. Oreo slept most of the day. He has a lot of catching up to do after spending so much time at daycare.

For lunch, Abdul and I went over to Food for Life. It was hard for me to eat and stay on my diet. I got the broiled salmon, green beans and sauteed cabbage. Not all that different from what I prepare at home but I am pretty sure that I make it a bit leaner. It was good though but I will have to work hard to burn that off tonight.

I did some cleaning around the apartment this afternoon. It really needed it. It is so easy to let the mess get completely out of hand if you don’t stay on top of it every day! It felt good to get some good cleaning in.

I also did some video transfers to get the last of the Disney video material moved over to the computer so that I can begin doing some editing of the footage. Maybe I will be able to have something for you over the weekend.  Our .5TB drive is now just about full and we have to quickly contemplate forward looking storage solutions.  We have had to start deleted less important video footage and have stopped prepping videos for our portable players as there is just no where to put it all.

Dominica came home and was very happy that I spent a few hours cleaning.  She cooked herself dinner which I just skipped being still full from lunch.  We watched a the end of the sixth season of That ’70s Show and then watched two episodes of Arrested Development.  Then I actually convinced Dominica to go down to the gym with me!  She did twenty-five minutes on the elliptical machine and I did thirty-five.  Then it was time for bed.

Weight Loss So Far: 8lbs