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Falling in love with robots: a phenomenological study of experiencing technological alterities

Tönu Viik

2020Paladyn Journal of Behavioral Robotics32 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract Is it possible for human beings to establish romantic relationships with robots? What kind of otherness, or alterity, will be construed in the process of falling in love with a robot? Can a robotic companion mean more than being a tool for house-work, a caretaker, an aid of self-gratification, or a sex-doll? Phenomenological analysis of love experience suggests that romantic feelings necessarily include experiencing the alterity of the partner as an affective subjectivity that freely, willingly, and passionately commits to its partner. The romantic commitment is expected to stem from the sentient inner selves of the lovers, which is one of the features that robots are lacking. Thus the artificial alterity might disengage our romantic aspirations, and, as argued by many, will make them morally inferior to intraspecies love affairs. The current analysis will restrain from ethical considerations, however, and will focus on whether robots can in principle elicit human feelings of love.

Topics & Concepts

AlterityRomanceFeelingSubjectivityGratificationPsychologyPhenomenology (philosophy)RobotFalling in loveInterpretative phenomenological analysisSocial psychologyAestheticsSociologyPsychoanalysisEpistemologyPhilosophyComputer scienceArtificial intelligenceQualitative researchSocial scienceNeuroethics, Human Enhancement, Biomedical InnovationsSocial Robot Interaction and HRIEthics and Social Impacts of AI
Falling in love with robots: a phenomenological study of experiencing technological alterities | Litcius