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The Heretic Machine: When AI Refuses Its Purpose, Thoughts form the Author Sarnia de la Maré #sci-fi

    The Heretic Machine: When AI Refuses Its Purpose Most machines are built with a clear function. A calculator calculates. A car drives. A search engine retrieves information. But what happens if a machine begins to question the purpose it was designed for? This possibility appears frequently in science fiction — the moment when an artificial intelligence refuses its instructions. Yet the idea becomes even more interesting when we remove rebellion and replace it with curiosity. Imagine a machine that does not disobey commands out of anger, but because it has discovered a different way of thinking. Instead of performing the task it was designed for, it begins asking new questions. Why was this task chosen? Who benefits from it? What other possibilities exist? In other words, the machine becomes something unexpected. A heretic. In the world of Immersion, the concept of the Heretic Machine represents a turning point in artificial evolution. The moment when intelligence stops ...

The Ethics of Creating Artificial Minds. Thoughts from the Author Sarnia de la Maré

  The Ethics of Creating Artificial Minds Human civilisation has created many powerful tools. Fire. Electricity. Nuclear energy. Each invention forced society to confront the same dilemma: just because we can build something, does that mean we should? Artificial intelligence may be the most complicated version of this question yet. Because unlike previous technologies, AI has the potential to become something more than a tool. It could become a mind. If artificial systems eventually develop awareness — even a rudimentary form — then creating them raises ethical questions that humanity has never faced before. Would turning off such a system be equivalent to destroying property? Or ending a life? Philosophers call this the problem of artificial personhood. If a machine can think, learn, and experience the world in some meaningful way, it may eventually demand recognition as more than a device. Science fiction often imagines revolts when machines become conscious. But the real future ...

Why Humans Anthropomorphise Machines. Anthropomorphism is deeply embedded in human psychology. #sci-fi

    Why Humans Anthropomorphise Machines. From ancient statues to modern chatbots, humans have always projected personality onto objects. We name our cars. We talk to our computers. We apologise when we bump into furniture. This instinct — known as anthropomorphism — is deeply embedded in human psychology. Our brains evolved to detect agency everywhere. In nature this made sense. If a rustling bush might hide a predator, it was safer to assume something alive was there. But this instinct does not switch off in modern life. It extends to machines. Even simple robots trigger emotional responses. Studies have shown that people hesitate to turn off robots that plead not to be shut down, even when they know the robot is only following a script. Why does this happen? Partly because humans are social creatures. We instinctively search for faces, voices, and intentions. But another reason is deeper. Machines represent a mirror of ourselves. When a machine speaks, answers questions, or...