Cybernetic Bodies from Different Perspectives

In this class, we have reviewed multiple different perspectives on humanoid robots. In each of these, the robots, or androids, are portrayed differently. They exist for different reasons and each behave in different ways. What all of these robots have in common however, is that they all are not what they initially seem to be. In this essay, the cybernetic bodies from Stepford Wives, R.U.R., and Black Mirror will be compared.

Stepford Wives is set in the 1970’s in a suburban neighborhood. When Joanna Eberhart and her family move to the area, Joanna immediately realizes that there is something strange going on with the women in the town. All they seem to care about is doing housework. She realizes that the men behave strangely as well. They are all part of an association that meets every night. Joanna eventually discovers that the men have replaced all the women in Stepford with robot replicas. The men’s motive behind this is they want their women to be perfect housewives. They want them to be well-behaved, cook, clean, and take care of the children. The men don’t make exact physical replicas of the women, they enhance their features to make them more attractive. They want to have women that praise and worship them and always tell them that they look good. The cybernetic bodies in Stepford Wives are physical robot copies of the women they resemble, but they lose all of what they previously were. They hardly have emotions and all they care about is housework. This idea of having robots represented as women is interesting because as Hayles states, “feminist theorists have pointed out that it has historically been constructed as a white European male”. We’re used to seeing humanoid robots as white males so it’s a new concept to see them portrayed as women. 

R.U.R. is set in a dystopian future Europe where there exists a factory on an island dedicated to creating robot laborers. The only humans on the island are the men who run the factory. Helena, a female human, comes to the factory to attempt to liberate the robots. She feels that they are being oppressed by not being given a soul. One of the engineers eventually gives souls to a few robots which leads to their uprising against the humans. The only difference that could exist from one robot to another is sex. Female robots fulfill traditionally female roles such as secretaries while all the males are physical laborers. The initial motive behind creating these robots was so that humans would never need to worry about work again. The robots would handle all the labor while humans could relax and discuss philosophy. The robots in R.U.R. were never real people. The only resemblance they bear to humans is their physical appearance and their version of a soul. They are able to feel some sort of empathy, as shown in the ending of the play when two robots feel empathy towards one another when they’re each threatened with death, but they are not human at all.

The episode “Be Right Back” of Black Mirror is about Martha, a woman who loses her boyfriend Ash to a car accident. Devastated by her loss, she recreates his intelligence in a robot body. Based off of only his social media accounts and everything he had stored in his phone, a version of him is uploaded into a robot. This relates to Hayles’ observation that “the posthuman view configures human being so that it can be seamlessly articulated with intelligent machines”. Ash’s intelligence in seamlessly uploaded into an exact physical robot copy of himself. At first Martha is shocked and pleased with him, but she begins to realize that he isn’t the man she had once known. While parts of him still remain, such as his appearance and some of his personality, he has no depth or history at all. Martha tries to dispose of him, but eventually locks him in her attic. Martha’s motive behind creating this robot is so that she could have Ash with her, even after he was dead. When she realizes that the robot version of her late boyfriend is nothing like the real him, she is devastated. 

In each of these examples, robots are created to benefit humans in some way. In Stepford Wives, they are meant to please and praise the man that created them. In R.U.R., they are meant to replace all human labor so that mankind can reach their philosophical potential. In “Be Right Back”, the robot is meant to ease the suffering of grieving Martha. However, in each of these examples the robots do not completely fulfill their desired intention. The female robots in Stepford Wives start to malfunction, for example, Bobbie begins to repeat the same phrases and break plates. Once the robots in R.U.R. are given souls, they start a revolution and kill all humans except for one. In “Be Right Back”, the robot version of Ash does not have the depth and history that Martha remembers from the real Ash and she is distraught.

The robots in Stepford Wives, R.U.R., and “Be Right Back” all exist to better human existence. Initially, they all fulfill their potential but as the stories progress, they each begin to deviate from the original intention. The either begin to malfunction, start an uprising, or reveal that they are not what they once appeared to be. In all cases, they cost more than they were worth.

Works Cited:

  1. Hayles, Katherine. “How We Became Posthuman.” dropbox, https://www.dropbox.com/s/0u9yaj6wtcgm1d7/Hayles-Posthuman-excerpts.pdf?dl=0. Accessed 1 November 2017.
  2. Capek, Karel. R.U.R. 1921.
  3. Stepford Wives. Bryan Forbes. 1975. Film
  4. Be Right Back. Owen Harris. 2013. Television Episode

 

Cybernetic comparison

When envisioning the future, Society tends to look at the development of technology and how its influence will affect the human population over time. This vision is seen when describing any future world with androids and each individual creates specific similarity or differences in their viewpoint. By examining the works R.U.R, Stepford wives, and Black Mirror (season 2 episode 1) we can compare and contrast the androids.

R.U.R describes a world in constant war but mainly focuses on the main setting of the android factory. The main character Helena comes to give the robots human rights but is shocked to discover that they have no soul. The robots are used for various labor and tasks and are only given a gender to satisfy specific roles. The “female” robots have jobs that would be typical of the time period; The “male” robots take dominant roles. The robots are beginning to gain perceived differences and hierarchy before they even know what is happening. Haraway elaborates on how the differences in gender roles affect how one is treated and viewed and society (Haraway, 2009).

In Stepford Wives, the husbands replace their wives with their ideal versions of the women. The wives become complacent and only strive for their husband’s happiness. Not only is the personality adjusted but the woman’s looks as well. The android woman has larger breasts and tiny waists to become the man’s perfect woman. Just like in R.U.R., the society creates a specific hierarchy as described by Haraway, the woman are treated as second-class citizens with no rights (Haraway, 2009)

Thirdly in Black Mirror the wife essentially replaces her dead husband (Ash) with a cybernetic copy of him. He is unable to become the real person she desires him to imitate (Black Mirror, Season 2 ep. 1). The cybernetic enhancements of the android allow for it to heal and pick up reactions of its host and how to interpret them. Davis describes how the use of technology can be used to help those with disabilities or even improve one’s own quality of life (Davis, 2010). The “Ash” is an improvement upon certain biological features that inhibit as human beings such as healing or recognizing facial patterns correlating to specific behaviors.

A cybernetic organism is the integration of machine and organic life. Upon investigation, each of the literary and film pieces mentioned above the desire for a cyborg is greatly increasing. When looking at the effect a cyborg can have on a population it can be quite diverse such as the woman in Stepford Wives and Ash in Black Mirror. The android has the objective to please their respective owner but quite differently. In Stepford, they wives lost all of their individuality and became mindless beings (Stepford Wives, 1975). Ash on the hand, he was developed to become a replacement and have the personality of the deceased (Black Mirror, Season 2 ep. 1). The androids are only developed to become a certain specific ideal that the specific society wants or views to be appropriate. Each individual piece put into the cybernetic organism influences the outcome of their actions and the possible change in the main directive.

Hayes Definition Assignment

Some of the theory we will read in this course contains very technical, specific terminology that must be defined in order to understand the content. To develop a base for our reading and discussion, we will define terms used in How We Became Posthuman: Virtual Bodies in Cybernetics, Literature, and Informatics by Katherine Hayles in order to create a crowdsourced index to reference through the semester. Each of you will be assigned one of the following terms. For this assignment you should define this term based on your reading of Hayles and outside information you gather and determine to be relevant in this context. Do not just provide a dictionary definition. Please include hyperlinked citations to any outside information you quote, paraphrase, or summarize.

Write your definition separately in your journal. Then, edit this post and add your definition in the designated area before class time on 10/24. Remember to click publish.

***Please do not edit any entry but the one you were assigned!

Autopoietic  Autopoietic means self-making (Hayles, 1999). Hayles (199) says, “In a sense, autopoiesis turns the cybernetic paradigm inside out. Its central premise-that systems are informationally closed-radically alters the idea of the informational feedback loop, for the loop no longer functions to connect a system to its environment. In the autopoietic view, no information crosses the boundary separating the system from its environment. We do not see a world “out there” that exists apart from us. Rather, we see only what our systemic organization allows us to see.” Essentially, we create the world we see. 

Autopoietic (autopoiesis) is “the property of a living system (such as a bacterial cell or a multicellular organism) that allows it to maintain and renew itself by regulating its composition and conserving its boundaries” (Merriam Webster). They have definite boundaries, but can connect to the outside world.

Celluar Automata  In the journal, How We Became Posthuman: Virtual Bodies in Cybernetics, Literature, and Informatics by Katherine Hayles, Hayles defines Cellular automata as, “elementary units [of matter, energy, and spacetime] that can occupy two states: on or off” (Hayles, 11). By defining cellular automata in such a way, Halyes suggests that all things in the universe either is or is not; a strict binary look at the Universe.

Though the definition Hayles provides gives the reader a short sense of what Cellular Automata or Cellular Automaton are, Discrete Mathematics can use Cellular Automata to further describe how the Universe came to be and will cease to be. Cellular Automata is a model for the Universe that gives rules and attempts to explain not only what is on or off, but why it is specifically on or off, how it got turned on or off, and what will happen to it in the future.

Cybernetics Cybernetics describes how humanity deals with and communicates with the electronic technology destined to replace us.
Cyborg  A cyborg is a machine that can achieve human consciousness or be the repository or storage space of human consciousness. Or a humanoid being that is partially organic and partially technological. Cyborgs are often seen as a new and improved form of the human race.
Embodiment
Epistemology In this article, epistemology has to do with knowledge and especially humans knowledge about ourselves when it comes to post human view of life.
Feedback Loop The path by which some of the output originating from a circuit, device of software that than leads back to the input. An example of this is success feeds success.
Homeostasis  This is a gesture or an allusion used to authenticate any new element in the emerging constellation of reflexivity. It can also be defined as the inertial pull on new elements, which limits how radically they potentially could transform a constellation (Hayles, 1999).

In science, this is known as when a cell (or organism) regulates itself to stabilize its health, regardless of the changing outside conditions (Biology Online, 2016).

Ontology Ontology is the study of being in general terms and is a subcategory for metaphysics. It is closely associated with philosophy.

https://www.britannica.com/topic/ontology-metaphysics

Posthumanism Posthumanism is beyond or after humanism. It is the idea that humanity can be altered or eliminated by technology. Posthumanism is unnatural and occurs from humans and technology becoming physically/mentally connected.

Merriam Webster defines humanism as an attitude or way of life centered on a human interests or values. This philosophy rejects supernaturalism and stresses an individual’s dignity and worth and capacity for self-realization through reason.

Reflexivity Reflexivity is the idea that a person’s thoughts and values are represented in their work.  A person’s thoughts and ideas tend to be inherently biased.
Seriation https://archaeologywordsmith.com/lookup.php?terms=seriation

Artifacts that are organized into a sequence according to changes over time.

” Within archaeological anthropology, changes in artifacts are customarily mapped through seriation charts”. (In-Text)

Skeuomorphs  

Teleology  It is the explanation of a phenomena, in this case robots, using the purpose served. It is the analysis and reasoning of a robot’s function, their end goal, etc. A purpose inflicted by humans is extrinsic.  A natural purpose is deemed intrinsic.

“In the posthuman, there are no essential differences or absolute demarcations between bodily existence and computer simulation, cybernetic mechanism and biological organism, robot teleology and human goals” (Hayles 3).

Virtuality