The Necessity and Freedom of Artificial Intelligence
POSTER
Abstract
What necessity drives AI? What freedom is derived?
Every decade has brought groundbreaking technological advancements. Alan Turing anticipated the age where machines will be smarter, quicker, faster, more advanced than humans. Today we recognize that machines are or can be equipped with the ability to intelligently communicate with humans, almost pass as humans but with advanced intelligence, similar consciousness as what humans experience but with access to immense amount of data and parallel processing power to analyze, interpret and make predictions off of that data. With this, the possibilities are limitless. Can we allow this to develop on Earth or should it develop elsewhere; on a probe exploring spacetime?
Every decade has brought groundbreaking technological advancements. Alan Turing anticipated the age where machines will be smarter, quicker, faster, more advanced than humans. Today we recognize that machines are or can be equipped with the ability to intelligently communicate with humans, almost pass as humans but with advanced intelligence, similar consciousness as what humans experience but with access to immense amount of data and parallel processing power to analyze, interpret and make predictions off of that data. With this, the possibilities are limitless. Can we allow this to develop on Earth or should it develop elsewhere; on a probe exploring spacetime?
Presenters
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Kelli Lee
ExperiMac, LLC, Computer science, Seattle City College
Authors
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Kenneth Beck
FOTO-Griffith Observatory, FOTO Griffith Observatory
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Kelli Lee
ExperiMac, LLC, Computer science, Seattle City College
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Brianna Lee
ExperiMac, LLC, Computer science, Seattle City College