Tilden's Laws of Robotics
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
(Redirected from Tilden's Law of Robotics)
|
|
It has been suggested that this article or section be merged into Mark W. Tilden. (Discuss) Proposed since September 2009. |
| Laws of robotics |
|---|
| Three Laws of Robotics by Isaac Asimov (in culture) · Tilden's Laws of Robotics by Mark Tilden |
| Related topics |
| Roboethics · Ethics of AI Friendly AI · Machine ethics |
Mark W. Tilden is a notable robotics physicist who was a pioneer in developing simple robotics[1] Mark W. Tilden's three guiding principles/rules for robots are:[2][3][4]
- A robot must protect its existence at all costs.
- A robot must obtain and maintain access to its own power source.
- A robot must continually search for better power sources.
In Wired magazine, Tilden paraphrased this as
- Protect thine ass.
- Feed thine ass.
- Look for better real estate.
What is notable in these three rules is that these are basically rules for "wild" life, so in essence what Tilden stated is that he wanted to do is "proctoring a silicon species into sentience, but with full control over the specs. Not plant. Not animal. Something else."[5]
[edit] References
- ^ "[1]"
- ^ Ashley Dunn. "Machine Intelligence, Part II:From Bumper Cars to Electronic Minds" The New York Times 5 June 1996. Retrieved 26 July 2009.
- ^ Hapgood, Fred (September 1994), "Chaotic Robotics", Wired (2.09), http://www.wired.com/wired/archive/2.09/tilden_pr.html
- ^ makezine.com: A Beginner's Guide to BEAM (Most of the article is subscription-only content.)
- ^ "[2]"
[edit] See also
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| This robotics-related article is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. |