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Something I have been thinking about recently is how to write a character who is an artificial intelligence and not have him feel human. Specifically an AI who is designed to think faster and better than a human. In my current book, I have an AI who acts humans, but that is part of how he was made. I tried writing a book with a super intelligent AI before (a book that will hopefully never be read by anyone besides me), but the character felt too human. Part of the problem is a human can't fully comprehend how a super intelligent AI would think. Does anyone have any advice for writing an AI that doesn't feel human?

White Eagle
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    If you haven't read "A Fire Upon the Deep" it's my recommended read for "massively massive AI". Answers below may get you think about it philosophically, but this one might be better by example. Another, more out there take, would be The Fractal Prince and subsequents. Short thought: AIs are as human as their creators want them to be and are capable of making them. – Kirk Apr 03 '18 at 19:41
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    General-AI'll likely seem very human; tell-tale signs will largely be that they lack human limitations, e.g. if you ask for the square-root of a huge number, they'll be able to spit it out. Is that what you'd like, or do you want to invent some quirks like the robots in 1980's movies had? – Nat Apr 04 '18 at 00:16
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    So, I am curious, what do you mean by "acts human?" Is this AI that occupys a human like robot, or is this AI's physical hardware not human shaped? What is the purpose of this acting human behavior. – hszmv Apr 04 '18 at 12:12
  • You're being watched. No, really, you should take a look at that series to see how an Artificial Super Intelligence (ASI) communicates with human beings. – Mast Apr 04 '18 at 19:13
  • @hszmv The character in my current book acts like a smart human. Beyond the fact he doesn't need sleep and such (and if it wasn't said), the reader won't realize he was an AI. – White Eagle Apr 04 '18 at 19:22
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    I suggest reading Nick Bostrom's SuperIntelligence. – JacobIRR Apr 04 '18 at 19:54
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  • You can explain superhuman decision in detail to make them human comprehensible. 2) To make it feel AI or robotic use technical words, symbols or pseudo-code in place of words: "R-9000 had categorised the man as dead: Heart rate > 1 BPM, ~4.5L of blood loss + level 3 cranial haemorrhaging = 1% chance of survival."
  • – josh Apr 05 '18 at 11:57
  • @WhiteEagle: Okay, so, here's the question for you to ponder: Are there any limitations to his thoughts AND/OR actions that would not be present in a human. That is, could he think of the act of murdering someone? Could he carry it out if he can think of it? Is he bound by code from performing a certain set of actions at all, by means of not being capable of thinking of that action or not being able to perform that action. – hszmv Apr 05 '18 at 15:40
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    What super-intelligent AIs will lack is not empathy, but the most hyper-developed feature of all living things: *self-preservation & competition* (ie, evolution). This instinct is so pervasively ingrained at such a low level in us that we frequently don't even notice it and think that our actions and motivations are logical and reasonable, but in fact they are all informed by these same ulterior goals: Survive, Succeed, Perpetuate. Compared to us, a Super-Intelligent AI is going to seem like an erratic mix of altruistic saint, dangerously self-destructive and irrational schizophrenic – RBarryYoung Apr 05 '18 at 18:34
  • Would the Foundation (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Foundation_series) count as a Super AI? Would mankind count as a Super AI (individual humans are "super nerve cells", the Internet is the artificial part of this "Super Intelligence" which interconnects the "nerve cells" - I still call it artificial, because despite the components being "natural", the design/architecture is not. Then again, is an ant hill "natural" or "artificial"?). Would such an AI be self-conscious (the individual nerve cells are, but what about the complete thing). Would it act human? How slow would it think? – Klaws Apr 06 '18 at 07:57
  • I kinda want to post a question with the same title on SO! – Liath Apr 06 '18 at 09:40
  • I recommend Iain M. Banks's Culture novels. I think Consider Phlebas is the one which is mostly concerned with discussions between AI, sort of like Fire Upon The Deep. –  Apr 06 '18 at 19:58
  • The Red Queen in the movies Resident Evil was the AI representation of a little girl. She was the main antagonist and was logical, and scary. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Resident_Evil_film_characters#Red_Queen – Russell Hankins Apr 06 '18 at 20:49