@article{Duffy_2006, place={Edmonton, Canada}, title={Fundamental Issues in Social Robotics}, volume={6}, url={https://informationethics.ca/index.php/irie/article/view/137}, DOI={10.29173/irie137}, abstractNote={Man and machine are rife with fundamental differences. Formal research in artificial intelligence and robotics has for half a century aimed to cross this divide, whether from the perspective of understanding man by building models, or building machines which could be as intelligent and versatile as humans. Inevitably, our sources of inspiration come from what exists around us, but to what extent should a machine’s conception be sourced from such biological references as ourselves? Machines designed to be capable of explicit social interaction with people necessitates employing the human frame of reference to a certain extent. However, there is also a fear that once this man-machine boundary is crossed that machines will cause the extinction of mankind. The following paper briefly discusses a number of fundamental distinctions between humans and machines in the field of social robotics, and situating these issues with a view to understanding how to address them.}, journal={The International Review of Information Ethics}, author={Duffy, Brian R}, year={2006}, month={Dec.}, pages={31–36} }