Fritz Lanham, The Houston Chronicle, January 2, 2008
Love + Sex With Robots: The Evolution of Human-Robot Relationships,
By David Levy, Harper, 334 pp. $24.95.
If you’re younger than 35, you’ll probably live long enough to put David Levy’s prediction to the test. Levy says that by 2050 we’ll be creating robots so lifelike, so imbued with human-seeming intelligence and emotions, as to be nearly indistinguishable from real people. And we’ll have sex with these robots. Some of us will even marry them. And it will all be good.
Levy lays out his vision of a Brave New Carnal World in Love and Sex With Robots: The Evolution of Human-Robot Relationships, which, despite its extended riffs on sex toys through the ages, is a snigger-free book. Levy’s no Al Goldstein. Rather he’s a 62-year-old British chess master turned artificial-intelligence expert persuaded that robot sex can brighten the lives of many, many unhappy people. “Great sex on tap for everyone, 24/7,” he writes on the final page of the book. What’s not to like?
“Chess” and “sex” aren’t words that normally share the same sentence, but in Levy’s case, the one led to the other. A keen chessman since boyhood, by the time he got to St. Andrews University he played at the international level. At the university he got interested in computers and the challenge of programming machines to play chess. Eventually he earned international recognition for his work on chess-playing computers and natural-language software, and in the mid ’90s headed a team that won the Loebner Prize, widely regarded as the world championship of conversational software. Today he owns a firm that develops electronic hand-held brain games.
Designing computers that talk like humans naturally led to the larger question of how humans interact with robots, which are nothing more than computers with arms and legs and a head. The Japanese have taken the lead in developing “partner robots,” machines that, for example, might do household tasks for elderly people. But if you could invent a robot that serves cocktails, could you not invent a robot that would make a superior bedmate?
It sounds like a mighty tall order. A machine with skin that feels like ours? With our physical dexterity? And, most important, with a mind like ours – imperfectly rational, sometimes emotionally intelligent, sometimes emotionally dumb?
Who needs sex with robots when you’ve got the internet?
Comment by DC Madman — January 4, 2008 @ 3:09 am
Why wait till then, just grab a Republican and you can have sex with an automaton today.
Comment by greyhawk — January 4, 2008 @ 5:18 am
I gave up trying to de-program my stepford wife
about five years ago.
The stumbling block was that once her state-instilled inhibitions were subdued the equal and opposite reaction was that She wanted to have sex with everyone but me.
With my run of luck,I’ve been waiting and dreading the onset of osteo-arthritus in my wrist and hands.
So a robot that wont get tired of my best Ron Jeremy (hedgehog) moves and failing health would be a welcome addition to the bedroom,
but can she cook?
If so, I’d marry her I betcha!
Comment by Rainlander — January 4, 2008 @ 11:45 am
Want to be the first ‘real’ woman off the Honda robot assembly line will be named Carmen Electraglide?
Comment by RS Janes — January 5, 2008 @ 8:46 am