HON 255- Thoughts on Ghost in the Shell
-I thought Ghost in the Shell was a very interesting movie. It demonstrated an almost scary version of society that was dominated by futuristic aspects of cyberspace. All of the characters are enhanced through technology and machinery and they have an advantage in that world. I would typically ever really watch anime, but Ghost in the Shell was full of such interesting ideas that have the potential to foreshadow the dark stories that have the potential to come to life in the future. It addresses philosophical question about the identities of humans and what this means for the future when powerful technology/machinery continues to intertwine in our lives. The artwork is able so amazing, detailed, and graphic all with deeper meaning.
-The "Three Laws of Robotics," which Asimov developed among his collection of robot-related short stories titled "I, Robot," are arguably his greatest contribution to the theme. The laws mentioned above include: A robot may not injure a human being or, through inaction, allow a human being to come to harm; A robot must obey orders given it by human beings except where such orders would conflict with the First Law; A robot must protect its own existence if such protection does not conflict with the First or Second Law.
-Whether or not something is fully human or fully robotic, if they have even a small percentage of the opposite system in them, the rules still need to apply seeing as they are not solely one or the other, they are a cyborg.
-Humans utilize robots to do everyday tasks or tasks in general that humans don’t want to or won’t do, which raised an ethical question of whether robots are entitled to the same rights as humans depending on if they have the same ability to make ethical decisions for themselves in the ways humans can.
- If robots were to be given the same rules as humans, the sense of peace may turn to chaos because could overpower humans or even be free of rules holding them back, robots also do not have the means to make ethically or morally right decisions because they cannot process emotions the natural way humans can.
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