- #1
Strato Incendus
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- 23
Whether Data in Star Trek, C3PO in Star Wars, Isaac in The Orville, or Arthur in Passengers: It seems to be a common trope that a spaceship always has “that one android character”. For Star Wars, in particular, C3PO is the only named humanoid droid in the main movies; R2-D2 and all the other smaller droids that aren’t capable of verbal communication (at least not one that’s directly intelligible to the audience), while certainly counting as “robots”, wouldn’t count as “androids” to me.
However, if androids became as omnipresent as other shows focussing on AI — say, “Real Humans” (both the Swedish original and the English remake) or “Westworld” would have you believe — then it would be plausible to me that such androids would also comprise a higher share of any spaceship crew.
For my generation-ship story, so far I went along with that “one android” trope. Coincidentally, his name is also Arthur — though this has nothing to do with the movie Passengers; I already chose this name before being aware of that movie. Much like the name of my ship computer’s AI, IRIS, is a mixture of Iron Man’s “Jarvis” and Siri read backwards (I reverse engineered the German novel “Blueprint”, in which protagonist Iris names her cloned daughter Siri), Arthur’s name was in part inspired by Isaac from The Orville (because of YouTuber Isaac Arthur), in part by Arthur Schopenhauer.
Aside from Arthur, there are a bunch of smaller droids with dedicated purposes. Primarily, the cleaning robots WHO2 and 2C, working in tandem with WHO2 vacuuming and 2C wiping. (And yes, their names are really terrible puns, though they do serve to explain why these two always clean the ship together.)
The question is whether the default assumption wouldn’t in fact be for the ship to have a lot more higher-level androids, like Arthur. This debate is part of the first prequel:
Given that the market leader in androids, Companion Industries, makes their fortune by building loverbots, some of the project organisers are worried that a high number of androids on board would disincentivise the human crew members from entering relationships with other human beings — that a significant share of the crew would prefer one of these highly developed androids instead — thereby sabotaging the core requirement of the mission of any generation ship.
(Of course, there’s also the usual concern about “What if the AI takes over and starts suppressing the humans?” But if people have been living among androids for a while now, even if only with loverbots, the concern of an AI takeover may have diminished over the years.)
If the pairbonding argument is convincing, it would allow me to have a 24th-century Earth with plenty of androids — while still having a spaceship with only one android. Note that Arthur looks closer to The Orville’s Isaac, combined with the real-world android Ameca — he does not resemble an actual human being, like the Arthur we see in Passenger, not even like Data. While he was built from a decommissioned Companion model, he’s deliberately designed not to look human anymore, precisely to prevent anyone from among the crew from preferring him as a partner over a fellow human.
This distinction is then also vital for the ending of the trilogy: If there’s a situation where one crew member would have to stay behind somewhere to sacrifice themselves for the others, given our human-owngroup preference, a lot of readers would consider it a plothole if a human chooses to sacrifice themselves when there’s a bunch of androids who could to the job instead. The primary way of circumventing this argument, of course, would be to assign at least some level of rights to these androids — one that would be sufficient to prevent them from being treated as second-class citizens.
(This would of course be the perfect opportunity to quote the Star Trek episode “The Measure of a Man”.
I’m not sure how much I want to make my story depend on knowledge of Star Trek, though. It would make sense for the crew to have access to a bunch of old movies from Earth, stored on the ship servers. Whether they would regard Star Trek as an inspirational tale that boosts the morale of the crew — or as a fairytale that lies to people about the real physics of space travel, especially considering the contrast to the much slower interstellar travelling speeds they’re experiencing on a daily basis — is a matter of each character’s personal opinion.
Anyways, if androids do have rights in the future — or end up getting them over the course of the story — the only permissible way would be for an android to volunteer to stay behind. Coincidentally, like in Star Trek: Nemesis.)
So, in short: If you got to put together a spaceship crew, how many androids would be among them, and why? :)
However, if androids became as omnipresent as other shows focussing on AI — say, “Real Humans” (both the Swedish original and the English remake) or “Westworld” would have you believe — then it would be plausible to me that such androids would also comprise a higher share of any spaceship crew.
For my generation-ship story, so far I went along with that “one android” trope. Coincidentally, his name is also Arthur — though this has nothing to do with the movie Passengers; I already chose this name before being aware of that movie. Much like the name of my ship computer’s AI, IRIS, is a mixture of Iron Man’s “Jarvis” and Siri read backwards (I reverse engineered the German novel “Blueprint”, in which protagonist Iris names her cloned daughter Siri), Arthur’s name was in part inspired by Isaac from The Orville (because of YouTuber Isaac Arthur), in part by Arthur Schopenhauer.
Aside from Arthur, there are a bunch of smaller droids with dedicated purposes. Primarily, the cleaning robots WHO2 and 2C, working in tandem with WHO2 vacuuming and 2C wiping. (And yes, their names are really terrible puns, though they do serve to explain why these two always clean the ship together.)
The question is whether the default assumption wouldn’t in fact be for the ship to have a lot more higher-level androids, like Arthur. This debate is part of the first prequel:
Given that the market leader in androids, Companion Industries, makes their fortune by building loverbots, some of the project organisers are worried that a high number of androids on board would disincentivise the human crew members from entering relationships with other human beings — that a significant share of the crew would prefer one of these highly developed androids instead — thereby sabotaging the core requirement of the mission of any generation ship.
(Of course, there’s also the usual concern about “What if the AI takes over and starts suppressing the humans?” But if people have been living among androids for a while now, even if only with loverbots, the concern of an AI takeover may have diminished over the years.)
If the pairbonding argument is convincing, it would allow me to have a 24th-century Earth with plenty of androids — while still having a spaceship with only one android. Note that Arthur looks closer to The Orville’s Isaac, combined with the real-world android Ameca — he does not resemble an actual human being, like the Arthur we see in Passenger, not even like Data. While he was built from a decommissioned Companion model, he’s deliberately designed not to look human anymore, precisely to prevent anyone from among the crew from preferring him as a partner over a fellow human.
This distinction is then also vital for the ending of the trilogy: If there’s a situation where one crew member would have to stay behind somewhere to sacrifice themselves for the others, given our human-owngroup preference, a lot of readers would consider it a plothole if a human chooses to sacrifice themselves when there’s a bunch of androids who could to the job instead. The primary way of circumventing this argument, of course, would be to assign at least some level of rights to these androids — one that would be sufficient to prevent them from being treated as second-class citizens.
(This would of course be the perfect opportunity to quote the Star Trek episode “The Measure of a Man”.
I’m not sure how much I want to make my story depend on knowledge of Star Trek, though. It would make sense for the crew to have access to a bunch of old movies from Earth, stored on the ship servers. Whether they would regard Star Trek as an inspirational tale that boosts the morale of the crew — or as a fairytale that lies to people about the real physics of space travel, especially considering the contrast to the much slower interstellar travelling speeds they’re experiencing on a daily basis — is a matter of each character’s personal opinion.
Anyways, if androids do have rights in the future — or end up getting them over the course of the story — the only permissible way would be for an android to volunteer to stay behind. Coincidentally, like in Star Trek: Nemesis.)
So, in short: If you got to put together a spaceship crew, how many androids would be among them, and why? :)