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When science fiction gets involved: a humanoid (sex) robot in 2018

Martin Jud
16.10.2018
Translation: machine translated

I'm amazed at the enormous progress made on humanoid robots in recent years. Despite such fascination, I wonder why humans need to build a humanoid robot in the first place?

From late 2013 to mid-2017, Boston Dynamics was owned by Google, before the Japanese company Softbank took over. For me, Japan is to robots what cheese is to Belgium Switzerland.

Take a look at Atlas' latest video:

What this 175cm, 82kg robot manages to do is pretty cool. Back in November 2017, it did a salto. And in May 2018, he was balad in the wild. But to see him moving around almost yamakasi style takes my breath away.

At 150kg, the first version of Atlas weighed twice as much as the current one. What's more, at the time it wasn't yet possible to power it with an independent energy source. Atlas could not move freely. What's more, the reduction in the robot's weight is the result of 3D printing technology.

A portrait in the image of Man

But none of this answers the question: why? Don't we want, as human beings and through the making of an android, to test and understand ourselves? Probably, but I suspect there's something else behind it: our sexuality.

The flexibility of the libido, the ease with which it moves from one object to another, is an important character in life. (Sigmund Freud)

A robot on four legs responds less to the emotions of the majority of us than a robot on two legs. In fact, we feel more at ease with our peers. Many philosophers and psychiatrists see in our behaviour an insatiable quest leading to happiness, even sex.

Humanoid robots are arriving in force. The applications are still somewhat different: for some years now, this has been the case in Asia, with dolls and the first sex robots. But don't worry! These robots will soon be flooding our market too. Let's see how long it will be before Abyss Creations' Harmony love robot is available direct from digitec or Galaxus!

Although I'm a little put off by this idea of Harmony, I'd like to do a little polling:

The thought that robots might soon look and act like humans is very much on my mind. Tell me, what do you intend to make your own android do in the future?

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I find my muse in everything. When I don’t, I draw inspiration from daydreaming. After all, if you dream, you don’t sleep through life.


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