Robots, after all
| Abstract | Computers have invaded everyday life, and networked machines are worming their way into our gadgets, dwellings, clothes, even bodies. But if pervasive computing soon handles most of our information needs, it will still not clean the floors, take out the garbage, assemble kit furniture or do any of a thousand other other essential physical tasks. The old dream of mechanical servants will remain mostly unmet. | |||||||||
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Mark Coeckelbergh (2012). Can We Trust Robots? Ethics and Information Technology 14 (1):53-60.
Min-Sun Kim & Eun-Joo Kim (forthcoming). Humanoid Robots as “The Cultural Other”: Are We Able to Love Our Creations? AI and Society.
Mark Coeckelbergh (forthcoming). Moral Appearances: Emotions, Robots, and Human Morality. Ethics and Information Technology.
Hans Moravec (1994). The Age of Robots. In Max More (ed.), Extro 1, Proceedings of the First Extropy Institute Conference on Transhumanist Thought. Extropy Institute.
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