Subj : Re: The Practical Joker (TAS): my review To : All From : Steven L. Date : Tue Nov 15 2011 16:07:57 From Newsgroup: alt.tv.star-trek.tos From Address: sdlitvin@earthlink.net Subject: Re: The Practical Joker (TAS): my review "Graeme" wrote in message news:531cfacd-5008-4d7a-a269-7861209f178a@y7g2000vbe.googlegroups.com: > On Nov 14, 1:04apm, "Steven L." wrote: > > "Graeme" wrote in message > > > > news:ade718eb-d20f-451e-ac85-ecde64c1659e@k5g2000pre.googlegroups.com: > > > > > This one is my #4 episode, after Slaver Weapon, Yesteryear, and > > > Pirates of Orion. aI still don't buy the idea of a computer > > > accidentally becoming sentient, but even Asimov wrote stories around > > > that premise, so we can let it pass. > > > > Computers that unexpectedly become sentient is a staple of science > > fiction for at least 50 years. aLots and lots of short stories, movies, > > and novels. aAlso a couple of TV episodes of "The Twilight Zone." > > > > An example is "When Harlie Was One," written by David Gerrold in 1972. > > It dealt with a robot programmed with artificial intelligence to the > > point that it could act like a person. aAnd when it became necessary to > > switch it off, the question arose whether it *was* a person, so that > > switching it off would constitute murder. > > > > And yep, that theme appeared later in a TNG episode involving Data--"The > > Measure of a Man," I think it was. > > > > -- Steven L. > > It's kind of a dumb story, across the board, though. In The > Bicentennial Man, I think the android was sentient through a > manufacturing defect or something. In Star Trek: The Motion Picture, > V'ger is said to have achieved consciousness because it acquired "so > much knowledge". A hard drive doesn't become conscious when you store > enough files on it. Consciousness is just a lot more complex than the > writers think it is. > > As for turning off a sentient computer, even if one existed, that > could hardly be murder so long as you can switch it back on at any > time. Depends. When I reboot my computer, everything that was in its RAM memory is gone. If you want to claim that completely erasing a sentient being's brain isn't murder, I would disagree with you because that being's knowledge base made it the person he is. -- Steven L. --- Synchronet 3.15a-Linux NewsLink 1.92-mlp * Origin: CCO BBS - capitolcityonline.net:26 (1:2320/105) .