Science Fiction Trivia
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Re: Science Fiction Trivia
Well, the lack of suggestions for that one rules out the Shockwave Rider question I was going to ask...
Something a little more well-known, then: what aspect of machine function can be tested with a slide rule, a stop watch, and a set of questions, in about fifteen minutes. (Obviously, lots of things; this is something which is not to a lay person obviously testable in that way)
Something a little more well-known, then: what aspect of machine function can be tested with a slide rule, a stop watch, and a set of questions, in about fifteen minutes. (Obviously, lots of things; this is something which is not to a lay person obviously testable in that way)
Re: Science Fiction Trivia
If the machine is really a machine?
Like is the machine a robot or human...
Like is the machine a robot or human...
...and keep it under lightspeed!
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Re: Science Fiction Trivia
No, not that.
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Re: Science Fiction Trivia
Location of a weather sounding balloon? http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Global_hor ... _techniquecim wrote:Something a little more well-known, then: what aspect of machine function can be tested with a slide rule, a stop watch, and a set of questions, in about fifteen minutes. (Obviously, lots of things; this is something which is not to a lay person obviously testable in that way)
Re: Science Fiction Trivia
Interesting, but no, not that either.
Clue: a (different) simple test for the property Zieman suggested had been applied to the same machine earlier in the story, and had shown that it was indeed a machine.
Clue: a (different) simple test for the property Zieman suggested had been applied to the same machine earlier in the story, and had shown that it was indeed a machine.
Re: Science Fiction Trivia
This is a reverse Voigt test from 'Do Andriods ...', and in the back of my mind has Asimov plastered all over it. Trying to remember the book name ...
I'll go for I,Robot for now.
I'll go for I,Robot for now.
Re: Science Fiction Trivia
Oh, getting close... but what property is being tested?
Re: Science Fiction Trivia
I'm guessing 'Human-ness'
Re: Science Fiction Trivia
So it might be one of the later Asimov books - The rest of the robots.
Re: Science Fiction Trivia
empathy, surely?
Re: Science Fiction Trivia
No, not humanness. At the point this test was being applied the machine was unambiguously known to be a machine. What was being tested is something some machines have and some do not. No humans have this property, and so would fail this indirect test for it, but could pass a more direct and unsubtle test for it if they chose to.
Re: Science Fiction Trivia
Having just re-read the the question:
emotions?
emotions?
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Re: Science Fiction Trivia
Whether or not the machine obeys the First Law of Robotics?
Re: Science Fiction Trivia
Exactly correct.Disembodied wrote:Whether or not the machine obeys the First Law of Robotics?
Over to you.