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Why Build a Robot With Artificial Consciousness? How to Begin? A Cross-Disciplinary Dialogue on the Design and Implementation of a Synthetic Model of Consciousness

David Harris Smith, Guido Schillaci

2021Frontiers in Psychology17 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Creativity is intrinsic to Humanities and STEM disciplines. In the activities of artists and engineers, for example, an attempt is made to bring something new into the world through counterfactual thinking. However, creativity in these disciplines is distinguished by differences in motivations and constraints. For example, engineers typically direct their creativity toward building solutions to practical problems, whereas the outcomes of artistic creativity, which are largely useless to practical purposes, aspire to enrich the world aesthetically and conceptually. In this essay, an artist (DHS) and a roboticist (GS) engage in a cross-disciplinary conceptual analysis of the creative problem of artificial consciousness in a robot, expressing the counterfactual thinking necessitated by the problem, as well as disciplinary differences in motivations, constraints, and applications. We especially deal with the question of why one would build an artificial consciousness and we consider how an illusionist theory of consciousness alters prominent ethical debates on synthetic consciousness. We discuss theories of consciousness and their applicability to synthetic consciousness. We discuss practical approaches to implementing artificial consciousness in a robot and conclude by considering the role of creativity in the project of developing an artificial consciousness.

Topics & Concepts

ConsciousnessCounterfactual thinkingCreativityArtificial consciousnessDisciplinePsychologyCognitive scienceEpistemologyCross disciplinarySociologyComputer scienceSocial psychologySocial scienceData sciencePhilosophyEmbodied and Extended CognitionNeuroethics, Human Enhancement, Biomedical InnovationsInnovation, Sustainability, Human-Machine Systems