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Why are we afraid of robots?
the role of projection in the popular conception of robots
pp. 121-131
Abstract
The popular conception of robots in fiction, film and the media, as humanoid monsters seeking the destruction of the human race, says little about the future of robotics, but a great deal about contemporary society's anxieties. Through an examination of the psychoanalytic conception of projection, this essay will examine how robots, cyborgs, androids and AI are constructed in the popular imagination, particularly, how robots come to be feared because they provide unsuitable containers for human projections and how at least part of what we fear in robots is our own idealisation of reason, science and technology.
Publication details
Published in:
Romportl Jan, Zackova Eva, Kelemen Jozef (2015) Beyond artificial intelligence: the disappearing human-machine divide. Dordrecht, Springer.
Pages: 121-131
DOI: 10.1007/978-3-319-09668-1_9
Full citation:
Szollosy Michael (2015) „Why are we afraid of robots?: the role of projection in the popular conception of robots“, In: J. Romportl, E. Zackova & J. Kelemen (eds.), Beyond artificial intelligence, Dordrecht, Springer, 121–131.