Frankenstein: the AI and God
Escrito en la categoría IA en la ciencia ficción, Literatura
12 de Noviembre del 2009
Frankenstein is a novel published in the 19th century, the gold age of horror literature. At that time, some authors as Bram Stoker, Edgar Alan Poe, or Gustavo Adolfo Bécquer wrote their main works. However, this blog is not a horror blog, but artificial intelligence has sometimes inspired these novels. Even though Frankenstein isn’t about robots that will dominate the world, or conscious machines, doctor Victor Frankenstein and his assistant whished to create life from nothing. For this cause, the doctor put together some body parts of dead people. His intentions are to bring to life the monster he has constructed, and to get it to have its own conscience. Dr Frankenstein achieves his objetive: the monster receives the life spark from the lightning and it stands up.

The goal of the AI is similar. Our purpose is that an inert thing, as a silicon board, can think, learn, feel and have conscience. So, artificial inteligence is the life spark that Victor Frankenstein sends to his creature.
But, this novel has a moral: the subtitle of this story is “the Modern Prometheus”, and so the message is obvious: don’t play to be God, because you will finish tied in the highest peak of a mountain and a eagle will eat your liver. In the novell, the doctor regrets having created a monster, so he escapes and he leaves his creation alone. The criature is rejected by society, and isn’t understood, it is angry and starts a crime wave. This story is similar to HAL-9000’s, Skynet’s and other sci-fi stories that talk about AI development.
Are we falling in the errors that were already predicted in the 19th century? Are we playing to be God?
BONUS: Perharps, Young Frankenstein is the best film about Frankenstein’s story.

