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Eindhoven University Researchers
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This document page, marked as House Oversight evidence, appears to be an excerpt from a philosophical or scientific essay discussing the ethics of artificial intelligence, human rights, and cognitive science. It references various thought experiments (Chinese Room, Milgram) and figures (Scott Adams, Isaac Asimov, Daniel Kahneman) to explore the legal and moral distinctions between humans, hybrids, and machines. The text argues that future machines may obtain rights similar to corporations and discusses the inconsistencies in how society handles privacy and cognitive differences.
This document is page 234 from a book titled 'Are the Androids Dreaming Yet?', likely authored by James Tagg (whose name appears in the text). It contains a Dilbert comic strip from January 29, 2006, regarding software specifications, followed by a text analysis of software engineering, variables, and complexity using an ATM analogy. The page bears a 'HOUSE_OVERSIGHT' stamp, indicating it was collected as evidence in a congressional investigation.
This document is page 380 from a book titled 'Are the Androids Dreaming Yet?' (presumably by James Tagg). It serves as a credits and attributions page for images and cartoons used in Chapters 12 through 15, listing sources such as Corbis, Shutterstock, Scott Adams (Dilbert), and James Tagg's own illustrations. The page bears the bates stamp 'HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_016070', indicating it was included in a document production for a House Oversight Committee investigation.
This document appears to be a scanned page (Chapter 15) from a book or compilation, titled 'FREE WILL'. It features a Dilbert comic strip from 1993 discussing the philosophical conflict between brain chemistry/physics and the concept of free will. The document contains a Bates stamp 'HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_016003', indicating it is part of a production of documents to the House Oversight Committee.
This document is a single page containing three inspirational quotes regarding creativity and invention, attributed to Scott Adams, Thomas Edison, and Steve Jobs. It bears the Bates stamp HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_015986, indicating it is part of a larger document production for the House Oversight Committee.
This document is page 170 of a House Oversight exhibit (likely related to Jeffrey Epstein's scientific interests or funding). It contains a philosophical essay discussing the evolution of rights for humans, hybrids, and machines (AI), referencing cognitive science experiments, Isaac Asimov's laws of robotics, and the potential for machines to gain corporate-like rights. The text explores the ethical implications of facial recognition, artificial consciousness, and the unequal application of rights across biological and artificial entities.
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