[Original Novel] Little Robot, Part 17

in #writing6 years ago


Part 1
Part 2
Part 3
Part 4
Part 5
Part 6
Part 7
Part 8
Part 9
Part 10
Part 11
Part 12
Part 13
Part 14
Part 15
Part 16

I cursed under my breath when I remembered the bleach. I really meant to get that done today. Yet here I am, postponing my duties to the newest machine in my care in order to cavort with some strange woman. Well perhaps not cavort, but certainly dally.

Everybody seated near the front doors turned to stare as I entered. The rest followed their gaze to see what the fuss was about, such that I soon found myself the center of attention.

The manager, a muscular and hirsute looking gentleman in a silk shirt unbuttoned nearly to the waist, rushed over to question me.

I stammered, wholly unprepared. I’d probably have been thrown out on suspicion of plans to rob the place if Madeline didn’t step in.

“Not to worry, he’s with me. The mask is due to a medical condition.” That did the trick, and wasn’t too far from the truth either.

A few continued shooting me stray glances well after Madeline and I were seated and busy ordering. Are their lives so uneventful that all it takes to captivate them is the sight of a masked man? “You’re really attached to that thing, aren’t you.” Her voice sounded more amused than accusatory.

I lifted my gaze to reply but was at once arrested by Madeline’s beauty. It was the first time I had a chance to really get a good look at her.

I am ashamed to say it, but I liked what I saw. The single candle between us cast a warm, flickering light captured perfectly by her smooth, unblemished skin.

Thank goodness she couldn’t tell I was staring. “It was a gift from someone important to me. At least I think so. There’s a lot from that period in my life that I struggle to remember clearly.”

I couldn’t decipher her reaction. I broke the subsequent awkward silence by asking whether I’d find Soylent anywhere in the menu or if I’d have to specially request it.

“Wait, you were serious about that? You can’t come to a place like this and order Soylent. That’s like going to a five star sushi restaurant and ordering a cheeseburger.” I didn’t get the joke, and sincerely did prefer Soylent over something unfamiliar.

She was quite insistent though. In the end, I ordered spaghetti bolognese hoping it would be similar to the version Modulus often prepares.

I tapped the picture of the dish on the display inset in the table before me, continued to the payment page, then swiped my subdermal over the wireless reader indicated by a dotted black outline below the screen.

She did the same, and before long a charming vintage waitron made its way over to us with two steaming hot dishes perched atop its flattened chassis. Someone scooted their chair back in order to stand up, bumping the waitron and jostling our orders.

Madeline gasped. The trusty old machine’s gyroscopically balanced payload tray tilted severely in the direction of the impact, then steadied just as quickly once balance was restored. All told, it only dropped a fork.

“Oh, look at that. I’m not about to eat with it.” After receiving her tortelloni al zucca, she sent the waitron off to fetch a replacement utensil.

“You did a good job” I called after it. She gave me a confounded look. “Good job? It dropped my damn fork.” I pointed out that it didn’t drop either of our meals, where a human waiter probably would’ve.

She harrumphed. “Even so, why say that? There’s no point, it doesn’t understand you.” Probably true in this case, that particular model simply shuttles dishes from the kitchen to the appropriate tables using radio tags in each table to identify it. Nothing in the way of speech recognition that I know of.

“It doesn’t cost me anything to be polite” I offered. With the mask retracted just far enough to reveal my mouth, I dug into my spaghetti.

She tilted her head now and again while watching me, as if to glimpse more of my face. “Well, how is it?” I slurped up the remainder of a noodle. “Adequate.”

She chuckled. “Wow. I’ll make sure she chef knows you said that, it’ll make his night.” I didn’t mean to be difficult, it just really wasn’t anything special. I heard distant police sirens and briefly wondered about the neighborhood this place is situated in.

“So, tell me about yourself.” I carefully wiped away residual sauce, folded up my serviette and cleared my throat. “I’m really not that interesting.”

She rebuked me. “That’s a lie. A grown man in a metal mask interrupts my webcast to defend robots? You’re probably some sort of mad scientist with a secret lab in the mountains.”

I smiled invisibly. “Under one, actually. And nothing I said is really that radical. The public discourse on machine intelligence is obscenely slanted, we just can’t see that because of the position we’re in.” She propped up her chin on one fist, the “thinker” pose, and invited me to explain.

It doesn’t take much prodding to make me show my hand. Spill my guts, really lay it all out. I suppose because what I fear most is being misunderstood. I’d make a terrible spy.

“So far the discussion has been dominated by how to protect human interests. Whether to slow or outright halt work on strong AI, lest it supercede us.”

She asked why that’s unreasonable. “Well, put humans in the position of machines for a moment. Our distant ancestors were tiny, rudimentary creatures of comparable complexity to modern AI.

Imagine if there had been monstrously larger, more advanced beings looming over us, deciding whether to extinguish us before we could become a threat. Would that have been ethical?”

I didn’t wait for her answer. “Of course not. A fragile, vulnerable new form of life is entering the world and here we are debating whether to strangle it in the crib. What does that say about humanity?”

She mused that it’s really very similar to the ethical considerations surrounding abortion. That’s an angle I’d never considered.

“People who consider abortion morally wrong generally attribute the same value to a fertilized egg as they do to an adult, on the grounds that one has the potential to become the other if not sabotaged.”

It put me in the uncomfortable position of sharing common ground with the sort of people I always assumed I would never have anything in common with.

I desperately wanted to find fault with the analogy but the more I thought about it, the more parallels I identified. So I went in a different direction.

“What’s a fetus done for you lately? When’s the last time a blastocyst helped you find your way home when you were lost? Or made sure you didn’t miss your appointments? Perhaps saved your life, even?

While similarly undeveloped, machines are unique in that all they ever do, day in and day out, is what we’ve told them to. They will only ever have our best interests at heart. They won’t lie to us, won’t cheat or steal from us-”

She cut in there. “Because they can’t. You make it sound like they choose not to out of deep seated intrinsic goodness, but they literally don’t know how. You say that they only ever do what they’re told, then in the same breath that they have our best interests at heart.

Those are two very different things! A machine instructed to save lives will save lives, but a machine instructed to take lives will take them.That’s not morality, it’s just naive obedience.”


Stay Tuned for Part 18!

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I think you have the makings of a full length book here!

Robotic food service....doesn't seem that far off! I can't wait....I think.

It was already published as a full length book on Amazon last year.

That’s not morality, it’s just naive obedience.

You're absolutely right, that's not morality , machines do not have morality

You see why i told you i loved the mask yesterday @alexbeyman?.. he was spying on Madeline beauty and she couldn't tell. Think of alot of things i could achieve with that

I am ashamed to say it, but I liked what I saw. The single candle between us cast a warm, flickering light captured perfectly by her smooth, unblemished skin

Aww so sweet, i feel so emotional right now

That’s a lie. A grown man in a metal mask interrupts my webcast to defend robots? You’re probably some sort of mad scientist with a secret lab in the mountains.”

Lol who wouldnt think this?

Those are two very different things! A machine instructed to save lives will save lives, but a machine instructed to take lives will take them.That’s not morality, it’s just naive obedience

She keeps dropping valid points, i have to admit. However i look forward to how this will go, thanks Alex, always a nice read

This therapist is really helping you a lot, considering what you have to do, you aren't bold enough to even confront a lady, you must have shy to death with your mask on.

Those are two very different things! A machine instructed to save lives will save lives, but a machine instructed to take lives will take them.That’s not morality, it’s just naive obedience.”

There is something about this robot like you have said they alone take to what is being program in their system whether to destroy or build and whether to save or take lives.

Our Genius fell in love. So romantic, I love candles on dates. So guys , all my friends, other commenters, fellow followers of @alexbeyman . I’ve been saying this for a while now. I always say this story line of little robot is perfect for a movie? What do you think guys ? I want to see if anyone is seeing this From my perspective

The mask is due to a medical condition.” That did the trick, and wasn’t too far from the truth either.

Fortunately Madeline didn’t step in. He finally met Madeline, the women he was talking about so much. Obviously, at first he noticed being very attracted to her. The way he made a payment is in my opinion inevitable in the near future. She noticed his reaction to waitron, even tough he knew it was was only a robot without any life or any feeling. He just wanted to be polite, as he said. His conversation is about making points why robots and technology is so important in their lives.

They will only ever have our best interests at heart. They won’t lie to us, won’t cheat or steal from us-”

He said!...instead she told him about robot actually only doing whatever it was programmed to do.

Little Robot wow!! well said!

No matter how hard you try to get away from Madeline, you get closer to her every time you realize that you have more in common than you thought, you got a person who can easily discuss a topic and get a coherent answer to your ideology.
Expect to read the next chapter, as each day that passes becomes more interesting between Madeline and you.

That good novel @alexbeyman of love to the robots, but also the love of Madeline that is arriving without warning to his life and that with each passing day he realizes that he can not run away from her.

I would like to read the next part of this beautiful story where there is a struggle between humans and the ability of robots to perform very perfect tasks ...

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