Can a Robot Have Free Will?

Using insights from cybernetics and an information-based understanding of biological systems, a precise, scientifically inspired, definition of free-will is offered and the essential requirements for an agent to possess it in principle are set out. These are: (a) there must be a self to self-determi...

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Main Author: Keith Douglas Farnsworth
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2017-05-01
Series:Entropy
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.mdpi.com/1099-4300/19/5/237
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spelling doaj-481c8c37fae74f99861f37e13bb25adb2020-11-25T01:12:47ZengMDPI AGEntropy1099-43002017-05-0119523710.3390/e19050237e19050237Can a Robot Have Free Will?Keith Douglas Farnsworth0School of Biological Sciences, Queen’s University Belfast, Belfast BT97BL, UKUsing insights from cybernetics and an information-based understanding of biological systems, a precise, scientifically inspired, definition of free-will is offered and the essential requirements for an agent to possess it in principle are set out. These are: (a) there must be a self to self-determine; (b) there must be a non-zero probability of more than one option being enacted; (c) there must be an internal means of choosing among options (which is not merely random, since randomness is not a choice). For (a) to be fulfilled, the agent of self-determination must be organisationally closed (a “Kantian whole”). For (c) to be fulfilled: (d) options must be generated from an internal model of the self which can calculate future states contingent on possible responses; (e) choosing among these options requires their evaluation using an internally generated goal defined on an objective function representing the overall “master function” of the agent and (f) for “deep free-will”, at least two nested levels of choice and goal (d–e) must be enacted by the agent. The agent must also be able to enact its choice in physical reality. The only systems known to meet all these criteria are living organisms, not just humans, but a wide range of organisms. The main impediment to free-will in present-day artificial robots, is their lack of being a Kantian whole. Consciousness does not seem to be a requirement and the minimum complexity for a free-will system may be quite low and include relatively simple life-forms that are at least able to learn.http://www.mdpi.com/1099-4300/19/5/237self-organizationdownward causationautocatalytic setgoal-oriented behaviourautopoiesisbiological computing
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Keith Douglas Farnsworth
spellingShingle Keith Douglas Farnsworth
Can a Robot Have Free Will?
Entropy
self-organization
downward causation
autocatalytic set
goal-oriented behaviour
autopoiesis
biological computing
author_facet Keith Douglas Farnsworth
author_sort Keith Douglas Farnsworth
title Can a Robot Have Free Will?
title_short Can a Robot Have Free Will?
title_full Can a Robot Have Free Will?
title_fullStr Can a Robot Have Free Will?
title_full_unstemmed Can a Robot Have Free Will?
title_sort can a robot have free will?
publisher MDPI AG
series Entropy
issn 1099-4300
publishDate 2017-05-01
description Using insights from cybernetics and an information-based understanding of biological systems, a precise, scientifically inspired, definition of free-will is offered and the essential requirements for an agent to possess it in principle are set out. These are: (a) there must be a self to self-determine; (b) there must be a non-zero probability of more than one option being enacted; (c) there must be an internal means of choosing among options (which is not merely random, since randomness is not a choice). For (a) to be fulfilled, the agent of self-determination must be organisationally closed (a “Kantian whole”). For (c) to be fulfilled: (d) options must be generated from an internal model of the self which can calculate future states contingent on possible responses; (e) choosing among these options requires their evaluation using an internally generated goal defined on an objective function representing the overall “master function” of the agent and (f) for “deep free-will”, at least two nested levels of choice and goal (d–e) must be enacted by the agent. The agent must also be able to enact its choice in physical reality. The only systems known to meet all these criteria are living organisms, not just humans, but a wide range of organisms. The main impediment to free-will in present-day artificial robots, is their lack of being a Kantian whole. Consciousness does not seem to be a requirement and the minimum complexity for a free-will system may be quite low and include relatively simple life-forms that are at least able to learn.
topic self-organization
downward causation
autocatalytic set
goal-oriented behaviour
autopoiesis
biological computing
url http://www.mdpi.com/1099-4300/19/5/237
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