From Automatism to Autonomy

Ruochen Bo
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Abstract

When we refer to something as automatic in ordinary language, we tend to speak of it as unconscious and working by itself —machinic, repetitive, needing no intervention or control from others to move along its natural course. If a process is automatic, we regularly assume that it happens independently of the human will. What is automated, in other words, will go on until non-human physical constraints prevent it from further labor, such as when the battery is dead in the robot or when the electricity goes out as the washing machine is running its usual course, or when one of its parts is worn out and needs repair. But if the machine “decides” that it is too tired or having a moody afternoon and wants to stop working mid-way through a task, we can’t help feeling very alarmed. Usually, we see automatism as precluding autonomy. Its automatic nature seems to suggest that it is, or ought to be, heteronomous in the sense that its course of action remains the same until it is told otherwise, e.g., when someone else turns the switch on or off. The contrast between the two statuses is prevalent in philosophical discourses as well, notably Descartes’ thought experiment that an automaton designed to look like an animal would be hard to distinguish from the real thing, but a machine that imitates humans would be far easier to detect, due to the latter’s language and general reasoning abilities, which reflect the fact that it is guided by immaterial mind.
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从自动到自治
当我们在日常语言中提到某件事是自动的,我们倾向于把它说成是无意识的、自我运作的——机械的、重复的、不需要他人的干预或控制就能沿着自然的轨道运行。如果一个过程是自动的,我们通常会假设它独立于人类的意志而发生。换句话说,自动化的东西会一直运行下去,直到非人类的物理限制阻止了它进一步的劳动,比如当机器人的电池没电了,或者当洗衣机正常运行时没有电了,或者当它的一个零件磨损需要修理时。但是,如果机器“决定”它太累了,或者下午心情不好,想要在任务进行到一半时停止工作,我们就会不禁感到非常惊慌。通常,我们认为自动性排除了自主性。它的自动性质似乎表明,它是,或者应该是,他律的,在这个意义上,它的行动过程保持不变,直到它被告知其他情况,例如,当别人打开或关闭开关时。这两种状态之间的对比在哲学论述中也很普遍,尤其是笛卡尔的思想实验,一个看起来像动物的自动机很难与真实的东西区分开来,但一个模仿人类的机器将更容易被发现,因为后者的语言和一般推理能力,这反映了它是由非物质的思想引导的事实。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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