I can see several scenarios where this would happen.Andres125sx wrote: ↑13 May 2019, 08:05What´s the reason you assume an AV might drive you off of a cliff? Solidifying prejudices maybe?Zynerji wrote: ↑12 May 2019, 17:23I don't really see anyone's issue here. I have a responsibility to myself to preserve my life, marriage, and bloodline. I have no concern over other's liberal view that I "should choose" to die to save another's bloodline when they are grossly negligent, because that is idiocy.henry wrote: ↑12 May 2019, 11:36
It’s interesting you mention rational, the part of your brain that would make the decision under consideration is not rational. It’s autonomous, basing its decisions on prejudice.
I use prejudice in its pure form. It bases on prior knowledge and experience. Some of that is very prior, coded in DNA and it’s manifestation in the brains structures. Some of it is taught to it by the rational part of the brain by repeated stimulation. This is why some elements of driving are a “skill”. When we first start everything is rational, we have to teach the brain, slowly because rational thought is slow, the movements that result in the car behaviours we want. This is the one of the things the autonomous car is trying to simulate and it is taught to it in a combination of offline training and online refinement, potentially it is better than the average human at this.
Once that skill is in place, further skills can be taught around situational awareness. Only a proportion of these get to the autonomous level, dependant on the focus the rational mind gives to them. This is where AVs are at a disadvantage. Humans can use similar experiences to load up the autonomous part of the brain. So moving about is generic and one can learn from crawling, walking and running. As is understanding an classifying the visual world and the objects in them.
It’s not clear that your rational choice in this scenario could be transferred to your irrational autonomous brain. 2 or 3 instances a month of your muttering under your breath about ill-disciplined children may or may not do it. But of course you may have used other experiences to train your mind so the behaviour you want may come about based on prejudices you’ve inherited or learned about the people about you.
Whatever happens in such a situation, if you survive your rational brain will take plenty of time to fit the behaviour of your autonomous brain to your preferred model.
I would swerve to avoid catastrophe, but I would not drive off of a cliff to prevent it (an AV might), and I will not apologize for the fact that self preservation is my "prejudice".
Judge me how you will, my responsibilities in life will still be upheld. I already sleep well with 33 confirmed kills from my time serving as a US Marine. My rational brain processes these after effects very simply and efficiently.
Driving you off of a cliff is killing you, running over someone might be, or might be not, so the scenario is completely different to the previous discusssion. You´re moving the goal posts
Anycase, people do not fall from the sky, you keep assuming scenarios wich are not real (running over someone or drivingg off of a cliff). Speed limits have a reason, and it is to have time to react in case of an emergency. That scenario will only happen if you´re driving way too fast, and AVs will never drive too fast, so your hypotetic scenario is unreal. In that scenario the AVs will make an emergency stop, braking before running over anyone, or in worst case scenario hitting them when the car is slow enough to not kill anyone, and to not drive you off of a cliff
Example:
A 16 year old driving his moms AV with 4 friends in the car. This driver is in human-drive mode, showing off Ludicrous Mode, and speeding. In the oncoming lane about a mile ahead of that driver is a 60 year old person driving alone in AV mode, doing the speed limit. Then 2 children chases a ball into the road, and the 16 year old's car sees it, and the driver reacts by changing lanes and slowing down, while communicating with the 60 year old's oncoming vehicle the state of the car and the pedestrians while calculating as an imminent accident. Computer calculates that losing 1 life of and elderly person is better than killing 6 kids, and makes the decision as to who makes a catastrophic maneuver for the "greater good". In this situation, it is absolutely the 16 year old that is the actual cause of this problem, but a stranger that is following the rules is "mathematically" determined to be the lowest loss of life, regardless of the events leading up to the accident.
I do NOT in any way, shape, or form, believe that an innocent person should pay the ultimate price for another persons' mistake. I don't understand why anyone else believes that they should...