After my extended diatribe on automation and the 'Post-Work' society over the last few weeks, it has occurred to me to question the role of home automation in this transition. After all, this blog started because of my interest in smart home technology and the promise of consumer level IoT. So how does a connected home fit into this transition? How does having a automated light switches and thermostats and shelf-top voice assistants help get us (me) towards a 'Life Well Lived'?
Showing posts with label morality. Show all posts
Showing posts with label morality. Show all posts
Monday, May 8, 2017
No Working at Home
Labels:
Amazon,
morality,
Post-Work,
smarthome,
voice assistant
Monday, July 4, 2016
Autonomous Morality
Ego Morality
Today's topic is how 'morality' will be programmed into autonomous vehicles. There has been some recurring press on this issue over the last month and I've had some time to formulate my thoughts on this topic. It is tough as, like most of first-world humanity, I think I'm moral but I've never faced the really tough life-and-death moral decisions that put that assertion to the test. Most of my morality training has come from Star Trek, and that's not bad, but it is fairly basic and presumes that I'm sitting on the bridge of a star ship in orbit, debating the gray areas of the Prime Directive. I hope I never have to even that. Should it happen though, I'm pretty sure that if I have the time to think through the decision, I'll do the right thing.
But, that's the catch: 'if I have the time to think it through'. The area where this is most likely to happen in my current life path is when I drive. It is easily the most dangerous thing that I do on a daily/weekly/monthly basis (I ski and take some bigger risks there, but am only able to get in about twelve days a year). Driving is a task that, when it goes south, will happen too quickly for my frontal lobe to override my learned motor skills and lizard brain reflexes. Reflexes that have been fine tuned over hundreds of thousands of years to keep the individual alive.
Labels:
autonomous vehicles,
morality,
morals,
self-driving cars,
Star Trek
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