robot Type post Author Amanda Witt Date July 22, 2022 CategoriesFaith & ScienceMathematicsNeuroscience & Mind Tagged , algorithms, artificial intelligence, Blake Lemoine, chatbot, common sense, companionship, confidentiality, consciousness, conversation, emotions, fear, Google, humans, LaMDA, Language Model for Dialogue Applications, meditation, Non-Computable You, psychologists, reading, Robert J. Marks II, sentience, spirituality, Washington Post, Wesley J. Smith Chatbots Might Chat, But They’re Not People Amanda Witt July 22, 2022 Faith & Science, Mathematics, Neuroscience & Mind 4 A Google engineer claims a chatbot meditates, believes itself to have a soul, has emotions like fear, and enjoys reading. Read More ›
nurse Type post Author Wesley J. Smith Date April 2, 2019 CategoriesBioethicsMedicine Tagged , __k-review, “aid-in-dying”, bioethicists, confidentiality, culture of death, Hippocratic Oath, hospital, ideology, interventions, nurses, patients, progressivism, suicide, suicide prevention So Now Will Nurses Only Prevent Some Suicides? Wesley J. Smith April 2, 2019 Bioethics, Medicine 5 Here’s the problem. The leadership of organized medicine and mainstream bioethicists are increasingly joining the progressive ideological coalition. Read More ›