Minding the Future: Artificial Intelligence, Philosophical Visions and Science Fiction
Cham: Springer (2021), xiv, 287 pp.
Contains glossary pp. 251-268, chronology pp. 269-276, index
ISBN 978-3-030-64269-3
"Bringing together literary scholars, computer scientists, ethicists, philosophers of mind, and scholars from affiliated disciplines, this collection of essays offers important and timely insights into the pasts, presents, and, above all, possible futures of Artificial Intelligence. This book covers topics such as ethics and morality, identity and selfhood, and broader issues about AI, addressing questions about the individual, social, and existential impacts of such technologies. Through the works of science fiction authors such as Isaac Asimov, Stanislaw Lem, Ann Leckie, Iain M. Banks, and Martha Wells, alongside key visual productions such as Ex Machina, Westworld, and Her, contributions illustrate how science fiction might inform potential futures as well as acting as a springboard to bring disciplinary knowledge to bear on significant developments of Artificial Intelligence. Addressing a broad, interdisciplinary audience, both expert and non-expert readers gain an in-depth understanding of the wide range of pressing issues to which Artificial Intelligence gives rise, and the ways in which science fiction narratives have been used to represent them. Using science fiction in this manner enables readers to see how even fictional worlds and imagined futures have very real impacts on how we understand these technologies. As such, readers are introduced to theoretical positions on Artificial Intelligence through fictional works as well as encouraged to reflect on the diverse aspects of Artificial Intelligence through its many philosophical, social, legal, scientific, and cultural ramifications." (Publisher description)
Introduction / Barry Dainton, Will Slocombe, and Attila Tanyi, 1
PART I. QUALITIES OF MIND
What Is it Like to be a Bot? SF and the Morality of Intelligent Machines / Michael Hauskeller, 21
Ex Machina: Is Ava a Person? / Einar Duenger Bøhn, 41
Enforcing Machine Ethics: Considering Governor Modules through Martha Wells’s Murderbot Diaries / Will Slocombe and Louise Dennis, 65
PART II. MEETINGS OF MINDS
Love in the Time of AI / Amy Kind, 89
AI Will Always Love You: Three Contradictions in Imaginings of Intimate Relations with Machines / Stephen Cave and Kanta Dihal, 107
Ann Leckie’s Ancillaries: Artificial Intelligence and Embodiment / Ina Roy-Faderman, 127
PART III. CHANGING MINDS
Selfless Civilizations: Robots, Zombies, and the World to Come / Stephen R. L. Clark, 165
Mindhunter: Transcending Geocentrism and Psychocentrism in Stanislaw Lem’s The Invincible and Peace on Earth / Milan M. Cirkovic, 179
Historicism, Science Fiction, and the Singularity / Mark Silcox, 197
Shifting the Goalposts: Reconceptualizing Robots, AI, and Humans / Michael Szollosy, 219
PART IV. CODA
Readme: A User’s Guide to Humanity / Will Slocombe, 245
PART I. QUALITIES OF MIND
What Is it Like to be a Bot? SF and the Morality of Intelligent Machines / Michael Hauskeller, 21
Ex Machina: Is Ava a Person? / Einar Duenger Bøhn, 41
Enforcing Machine Ethics: Considering Governor Modules through Martha Wells’s Murderbot Diaries / Will Slocombe and Louise Dennis, 65
PART II. MEETINGS OF MINDS
Love in the Time of AI / Amy Kind, 89
AI Will Always Love You: Three Contradictions in Imaginings of Intimate Relations with Machines / Stephen Cave and Kanta Dihal, 107
Ann Leckie’s Ancillaries: Artificial Intelligence and Embodiment / Ina Roy-Faderman, 127
PART III. CHANGING MINDS
Selfless Civilizations: Robots, Zombies, and the World to Come / Stephen R. L. Clark, 165
Mindhunter: Transcending Geocentrism and Psychocentrism in Stanislaw Lem’s The Invincible and Peace on Earth / Milan M. Cirkovic, 179
Historicism, Science Fiction, and the Singularity / Mark Silcox, 197
Shifting the Goalposts: Reconceptualizing Robots, AI, and Humans / Michael Szollosy, 219
PART IV. CODA
Readme: A User’s Guide to Humanity / Will Slocombe, 245