6533b86efe1ef96bd12cb3e3

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Rilkean Memories and the Self of a Robot

Antonio Chella

subject

roboticautobiographical memorieComputer scienceProcess (engineering)Rilkean memories0603 philosophy ethics and religion050105 experimental psychologySoftwareselfHistory and Philosophy of ScienceHuman–computer interaction0501 psychology and cognitive scienceslcsh:BC1-199lcsh:B1-5802TRACE (psycholinguistics)embodimentroboticsSettore ING-INF/05 - Sistemi Di Elaborazione Delle InformazioniEvent (computing)business.industryAutobiographical memorylcsh:Philosophy (General)Self05 social sciencesRobotics06 humanities and the artslcsh:LogicPhilosophy060302 philosophyRobotArtificial intelligenceautobiographical memoriesbusiness

description

This paper discusses the concept of Rilkean memories, recently introduced by Mark Rowlands, to analyze the complex intermix of hardware and software related to the self of a robot. The Rilkean memory of an event is related to the trace of that episode left in the body of the individual. It transforms the act of remembering into behavioral and bodily dispositions, thus generating the peculiar behavioral style of the individual, which is at the basis of her autobiographical self. In the case of long-life operating robots, a similar process occurs: the software of the robot has to cope with the changes that happened in the body of the robot because of damaging events in its operational life. Thus, the robot, in compensating the damages of its body, acquires a particular behavioral style. The concept of Rilkean memory is essential in self-adapting robotics technologies where human intervention on a robot is not possible, and the robot must cope with its faults, and also in applications concerning green robotics.

10.3390/philosophies4020020http://hdl.handle.net/10447/352954