Discussion about this post

User's avatar
MutterFodder's avatar

I've been giving myself a crash course in the history of philosophy these past few years, and although the road has been winding, one can see the progression of civil society these last few thousand years towards a more enlightened moral awareness. It may be slow, and often stalls out before growing in fits and starts again, but it's clearly a progression.

The question of "Am I my brother's keeper?" has been answered and re-answered in interesting ways, but the real progress has been in the follow up questions: "Who is my brother?" and "What do I owe him?" For all its faults, we now live in a modern society that believes we have a moral obligation to send aid and comfort to victims of natural disasters and wars and other human tragedies half way around the world. We even consider that animals may have rights not to suffer! Bob's notes that we've come pretty far even since Shelley wrote Frankenstein, a mere couple hundred years ago. This is really a remarkable progression!

But the hidden theme of "Frankenstein" is also that technology that gives us godlike powers may be beyond our moral capacity to manage. Sure enough, our biggest existential danger may be that our technological progression is moving faster than our moral evolution at this point.

Bob suggests it's a race against THAT clock. Anyone disagree? Is there a world where our moral evolution leapfrogs our technological gamesmanship?

Expand full comment
Antonia Malchik's avatar

Loved this! I really like Frankenstein as a novel, and went back and reread it after reading Smilla's Sense of Snow, which refers to that Arctic scene quite a bit.

Coincidentally, I was thinking about Frankenstein's monster the other day when wondering about the difficulties that often seem to occur when someone is writing a fictional self-aware AI character. The roboticist Ayanna Howard wrote about Frankenstein in her book about AI, "Sex, Race, and Robots," and how our imagined AI characters reflects human values and sometimes how we *wish* to see ourselves. Which seems related somewhat to your point about being able to see the "other" and cognitive empathy.

Expand full comment
34 more comments...

No posts