Sex
With robots
Expert even predicts marriage with life-like intelligent
robots by 2050. Houston Chronicle.
Jan 3, 2008
By
Friz Lanham
If you're younger than 35, you'll probably live long enough
to put David Levy's prediction to the test.
Levy
says that by 2050 we'll be creating robots so lifelike,
so imbued with human-seeming intelligence and emotions,
as to be nearly indistinguishable from real people.
And
we'll have sex with these robots. Some of us will even marry
them. And it will all be good.
Levy
lays out his vision of a Brave New Carnal World in Love
and Sex With Robots: The Evolution of Human-Robot Relationships,
which, despite its extended riffs on sex toys through the
ages, is a snigger-free book.
Levy's
no Al Goldstein. Rather he's a 62-year-old British chess
master turned artificial-intelligence expert persuaded that
robot sex can brighten the lives of many, many unhappy people.
"Great
sex on tap for everyone, 24/7," he writes on the final
page of the book. What's not to like?
"Chess''
and "sex'' aren't words that normally share the same
sentence, but in Levy's case, the one led to the other.
A keen chessman since boyhood, by the time he got to St.
Andrews University he played at the international level.
At the
university he got interested in computers and the challenge
of programming machines to play chess.
Eventually
he earned international recognition for his work on chess-playing
computers and natural-language software, and in the mid
'90s headed a team that won the Loebner Prize, widely regarded
as the world championship of conversational software.
Today
he owns a firm that develops electronic hand-held brain
games.
Designing
computers that talk like humans naturally led to the larger
question of how humans interact with robots, which are nothing
more than computers with arms and legs and a head.
The
Japanese have taken the lead in developing "partner
robots," machines that, for example, might do household
tasks for elderly people. But if you could invent a robot
that serves cocktails, could you not invent a robot that
would make a superior bedmate?
It sounds
like a mighty tall order. A machine with skin that feels
like ours? With our physical dexterity? And, most important,
with a mind like ours - imperfectly rational, sometimes
emotionally intelligent, sometimes emotionally dumb?
"I
think it's a reasonable assumption," Levy said in a
telephone interview from his home in London. He lays out
his case in a voice that's calm, rational, almost flat,
more geeky than goatish.
"If
one looks at the advances in technology in the last, say,
40 or 50 years, they've been immense, and the more we learn
about the science and the technology, the quicker it will
be to discover even more within that science."
Smart
money never bets against technological advances, but it
helps if you stack the deck. "The automaton simulates
man when man has been defined in an automaton's way,"
literary critic Hugh Kenner wrote. Is that what Levy does?
"I
take a pragmatic point of view," he said, "partly
because in my original field, computer chess, that was how
the problem was solved." Not by making machines that
thought like chess masters but by making machines that beat
chess masters.
Similarly,
Levy thinks, robots need only "simulate" human
intelligence and emotions "to the point that they are
absolutely convincing."
If you
can't tell whether the thing is man or machine, what difference
does it make? You'll treat it as if it were alive. The rest
is philosophical hairsplitting.
So who
will avail themselves of 21st-century sexbots?
Sad
cases, for one, people so physically unattractive or anti-social
or isolated or emotionally crippled that they have trouble
finding human romance. People who love their computers more
than their fellows. Hey, they're out there already.
"They're
lonely; they're miserable," Levy said. "I think
society will be a much better place when they have an alternative
that satisfies them without doing any harm to other people."
Add
in those who have a satisfying sexual relationship but are
simply curious and somewhere between 20 percent and 50 percent
of the population will experience man-machine mating at
least occasionally, Levy predicts.
He respects
the fact that plenty of people, out of moral or religious
conviction, will contemplate this with horror.
"But
by and large," he said, "it will be very good
for society, very beneficial, and I think that will be the
majority view within a relatively short space of time."
Sexbots
may put prostitutes out of business, he notes.
Near
the end of the book Levy alludes to a set of vexing questions.
If robots become utterly humanlike, must we not treat them
as more than machines?
So if
you marry a robot, can it inherit your estate? If you catch
it boffing the mail carrier, can you toss it out with heavy
trash? If your robot pops your neighbor in the mouth, who
does your neighbor sue?
Levy
admits he doesn't know the answers.
"There
are lot of questions here that need a great deal of discussion
and consideration from people who are much wiser than I
am in the field of ethics, philosophy and law. Clearly the
law makers and the lawyers are going to have a field day
debating these issues."
He expects
the impetus for creating sexbots to come from the sex-toy
industry rather than, say, MIT.
Already
a Japanese sex-doll manufacturer has announced plans to
market a doll with electronics in it, and Levy has read
that Japanese companies are working to produce sex robots
for people living in outlying fishing villages.
"I
think the Japanese are probably working on this more than
one would realize from the little that's been published
so far," he said.
Levy
has been amazed at the publicity the Love and Sex With Robots
has generated since its release last month. He's done a
dozen radio interviews and a TV interview. Howard Stern
raved about the book. So far, no hate mail.
Would
Levy himself have sex with a robot? He doesn't have to ponder
the question.
"If
there was a robot of the sort I describe in the book, I
would certainly want to experience using it for sex, and
I wouldn't regard it as anything untoward," he said.
"I would do it out of curiosity. Not that I have a
need for a new sex partner. I'm happily married."
And
the wife would be OK with this?
"Yes,
yes, and if she wanted to try one I wouldn't have a problem
with that. I would regard it as genuine scientific curiosity."
http://www.chron.com/disp/story.mpl/life/main/5414105.html