Archive for the ‘Science today’ Category

What is a Robot?

Maio 27, 2009

A robot is a virtual or mechanical artificial agent. In practice, it is usually an electro-mechanical system which, by its appearance or movements, conveys a sense that it has intent or agency of its own. The word robot can refer to both physical robots and virtual software agents, but the latter are usually referred to as bots. There is no consensus on which machines qualify as robots, but there is general agreement among experts and the public that robots tend to do some or all of the following: move around, operate a mechanical limb, sense and manipulate their environment, and exhibit intelligent behavior, especially behavior which mimics humans or other animals.

Stories of artificial helpers and companions and attempts to create them have a long history but fully autonomous machines only appeared in the 20th century. The first digitally operated and programmable robot, the Unimate, was installed in 1961 to lift hot pieces of metal from a die casting machine and stack them. Today, commercial and industrial robots are in widespread use performing jobs more cheaply or with greater accuracy and reliability than humans. They are also employed for jobs which are too dirty, dangerous or dull to be suitable for humans. Robots are widely used in manufacturing, assembly and packing, transport, earth and space exploration, surgery, weaponry, laboratory research, and mass production of consumer and industrial goods.

People have a generally positive perception of the robots they actually encounter. Domestic robots for cleaning and maintenance are increasingly common in and around homes. There is anxiety, however, over the economic effect of automation and the threat of robotic weaponry, anxiety which is not helped by the depiction of many villainous, intelligent, acrobatic robots in popular entertainment. Compared with their fictional counterparts, real robots are still benign, dim-witted, and clumsy.

Science with a Worldview:

Março 9, 2009

Scientific knowledge is one way to Truth. It is not the only way; neither is it altogether sufficient with certainty. If the man of science lives solely in the context of his laboratory, he runs the great risk of changing the intention of scientific thought in the pretence of regulating the world and taking care of Man. The researcher’s social contracts and the political implications of scientific problems bring the man of science face to face with the problems of the World. In situating himself on the plane of knowledge, he cannot ignore the other disciplines with philosophy on condition that the latter know how to explain in understandable language the originality and radicality of its own position (there are exemplary achievements in this regard).

Thus, the man of science is well situated in mankind. He is not apart from him. He shares in the contemporary problematic among men who live, sometimes tragically, the progressive rationalization of the human spirit.