Algernon wrote: ↑Tue May 10, 2022 4:23 am
I need to flush out a few things this week, but am very excited to play a robot. Some of my thoughts:
- No to the "Religious experience" (for now)
- Do I (the robot) tell this crew what really happened to me?
- Perhaps my external appearance is a basic polycarbonate coated alloy exterior that looks human(ish). Very basic so as to blend in. Something I purchased myself.
- Did I share the source of the anomaly with my previous owners?
- How did I gain freedom from the owners? Was I expendable and therefore discarded for parts upon my return, and then quietly slipped away?
- Do I secretly follow instructions of Assist/a Matryoshka named 1.618? Or do I have my own purpose now? Self discovery, something much greater?
- How did I fall into this particular party? I think I (the robot) would see things through a very specific lens/crystal...What do I gain/How will this interaction bring me to my ultimate goal (knowledge, power, enlightenment, a mission for a Matryoshka named 1.618)?
Excellent thoughts and questions! There is one that I can provide some world-lore on:
Algernon wrote: ↑Tue May 10, 2022 4:23 am
- How did I gain freedom from the owners? Was I expendable and therefore discarded for parts upon my return, and then quietly slipped away?
Manufacturing positronic brains is a fickle process. Two brains produced under identical circumstances can have wildly different outcomes. One may be good for nothing more than running a dishwasher, and the other might be fully sentient and sapient. So, before a brain is installed in, say, an armed and armored battle chassis, there is a period of evaluation. Freshly decanted brains go to the bot-garten, installed in various plastic bodies, and given a chance to perform simple tasks.
Most bot-brains are virtual intelligences—able to simulate a convincing conversation, and to adapt to changing circumstances, but not actually self-aware.
There are well-established and easily available protocols for a machine to declare itself sentient, and a reliable test to prove that it is truly self-aware and not just a virtual intelligence. Because of the influence of the Matryoshkas, galactic civilization takes the rights of sentient machines very seriously. Once a machine is recognized as sentient, they are immediately granted the full rights of galactic citizens.
Some brains are late-bloomers, and do not declare their sentience until after the bot-garten period. Manufacturers and owners don't like when this happens, because who likes to lose equipment that they have invested in? Galactic law does allow an owner to bill a sentient robot for the cost of its own construction, and it is not uncommon for a bot to sell its chassis, downgrading to a simple plastic one, in order to defray the cost.
So, I would imagine that your character's previous owners would assume that you were just a late-blooming spontaneous sentience, and dismiss any notion of intervention by a Matryoshka. They would have found this annoying, but nothing compared to the loss of the rest of the survey team—at least they were able to recover your data.
All of this has implications for Jeeves, as well. He might be a very advanced virtual intelligence, indistinguishable from another intelligent being. In this case, his position as valet is programmed. If he's actually sentient, then he is in this position by choice, and could make decisions contrary to it if he had motivation to do so.