Fibreculture Journal (Dec 2016)

FCJ-208 This Machine Could Bite: On the Role of Non-Benign Art Robots

  • Paul Granjon

DOI
https://doi.org/10.15307/fcj.28.208.2017
Journal volume & issue
no. 28
pp. 74 – 89

Abstract

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The social robot's current and anticipated roles as butler, teacher, receptionist or carer for the elderly share a fundamental anthropocentric bias: they are designed to be benign, to facilitate a transaction that aims to be both useful to and simple for the human. At a time when intelligent machines are becoming a tangible prospect, such a bias does not leave much room for exploring and understanding the ongoing changes affecting the relation between humans and our technological environment. Can art robots – robots invented by artists – offer a non-benign-by-default perspective that opens the field for a machine to express its machinic potential beyond the limits imposed by an anthropocentric and market-driven approach? The paper addresses these questions by considering and contextualising early cybernetic machines, current developments in social robotics, and art robots by the author and other artists.

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