Instigator / Pro
4
1470
rating
50
debates
40.0%
won
Topic
#1953

Cars are robots(I am pro, You are con)

Status
Finished

The debate is finished. The distribution of the voting points and the winner are presented below.

Winner & statistics
Better arguments
0
3
Better sources
2
2
Better legibility
1
1
Better conduct
1
1

After 1 vote and with 3 points ahead, the winner is...

Nevets
Tags
Parameters
Publication date
Last updated date
Type
Standard
Number of rounds
2
Time for argument
Two days
Max argument characters
10,000
Voting period
One week
Point system
Multiple criterions
Voting system
Open
Contender / Con
7
1557
rating
35
debates
52.86%
won
Description

No information

Round 1
Pro
#1
I will start my start argument now.

Define ROBOT
  • A machine resembling a human being and able to replicate certain human movements and functions automatically.
  • A machine capable of carrying out a complex series of actions automatically, especially one programmable by a computer.
  • A person who behaves in a mechanical or unemotional manner.
While the 1st and the 3rd definition does not apply to cars, as that they are either humanoid or human, the second does apply. Most robots only satisfy the 2nd definition and any object that satisfies at least one criterion will be considered a robot. 

Examples: LEGO EV3 Mindstorm Robot: https://i.ytimg.com/vi/R4_s56ZRKUQ/hqdefault.jpg
This image showcases a robot built with and only with LEGOs. It does not resemble a human nor is it a human, so it satisfies only the 2nd criterion, but nevertheless it is still a robot. The fact it has wheels may even make it a car, and that would mean cars could be robots.

Define CAR: 
    • A road vehicle, typically with four wheels, powered by an internal combustion engine and able to carry a small number of people.
    Then, there are cars that are, undoubtedly robots.


    They can drive automatically. and that makes them robots. 

    CLAIM1: Cars can be robots, and certain cars are robots.
    Con
    #2
    user2006 wrote...
    CLAIM1: Cars can be robots, and certain cars are robots.
    Now, had you said in your title, or discription, cars "can" be robots, i would not have taken on the debate, as indeed, you do get autonomous cars.

     with home robotics and the autonomous car as some of the main drivers.
    However, you did not say "Cars "can" be Robots".
    Your title says cars "are" Robots, which is two different things entirely.

    User2006 wrote...
    Define ROBOT
    • A machine resembling a human being and able to replicate certain human movements and functions automatically.
    • A machine capable of carrying out a complex series of actions automatically, especially one programmable by a computer.
    • A person who behaves in a mechanical or unemotional manner.
    Also your definition of what constitutes a Robot, is slightly limited.

    There is nothing concrete regards to what constitutes a robot, however general consensus has it that it is a little more than just an unintelligent machine.

    robots tend to possess some or all of the following abilities and functions: accept electronic programming, process data or physical perceptions electronically, operate autonomously to some degree, move around, operate physical parts of itself or physical processes, sense and manipulate their environment, and exhibit intelligent behavior, especially behavior which mimics humans or other animals.
    Now i would say what is written above, pretty much rules out "most" cars, apart from autonomous self driving cars.

    user2006 wrote...
    While the 1st and the 3rd definition does not apply to cars, as that they are either humanoid or human, the second does apply. Most robots only satisfy the 2nd definition and any object that satisfies at least one criterion will be considered a robot. 


    This is simply not true.
    There is no rule which says that to be considered a Robot the Robot only has to fit one criterion.
    I very much doubt in round 2 you will be able to find anything to support that statement with.

    Like i think we have already clarified, the only car before autonomous cars began getting tested on our roads, that would have fitted the description of being a Robot, would have been KITT from knight rider.

    KITT is essentially an advanced supercomputer on wheels. The "brain" of KITT is the Knight 2000 microprocessor which is the centre of a "self-awarecybernetic logic module that allowed KITT to think, learn, communicate and interact with humans. He is also capable of independent thought and action. 

    So no, very few cars, could be considered Robots.
    I think before a car can be considered a Robot, it at least has to have the ability to be autonomous, and most cars currently are not autonomous.

    Round 2
    Pro
    #3
    Let me give an example.

    Windshield wipers are automatic, they can just do their job while you press a single button.

    Since cars contain windshield wipers, cars are robots since it carries a windshield wiper.

    I understand that the first cars probably don't have them, but windshield wipers are extant on virtually all cars roaming on the streets, that is the "car" part. The cars that don't move or are broken are not considered cars consider it fails to do its job carrying passengers around the world. The first cars are either scrapped into the barn or being exhibits in the museum. Since about all cars have windshield wipers and windshield wipers are robots, cars are robots.
    Con
    #4
    User2006 wrote....
    Let me give an example.

    Windshield wipers are automatic, they can just do their job while you press a single button.

    Since cars contain windshield wipers, cars are robots since it carries a windshield wiper.

    I understand that the first cars probably don't have them, but windshield wipers are extant on virtually all cars roaming on the streets, that is the "car" part. The cars that don't move or are broken are not considered cars consider it fails to do its job carrying passengers around the world. The first cars are either scrapped into the barn or being exhibits in the museum. Since about all cars have windshield wipers and windshield wipers are robots, cars are robots.

    Let me begin by saying, i am British, and so i barely knew what a windshield wiper was, as i am British. But i am quite sure you are referring to "windscreen wiper", which is what us Brits refer to the device as.

    Now you may be surpised to know that the first windscreen wiper was first patented in 1896 by "George J Capewell". So perhaps a little earlier in time than you may have realised.

    One of the earliest recorded patents for the windscreen wiper is by George J. Capewell of Hartford Connecticut, which was filed on August 6, 1896 


    autonomous v automated

    Now it is important for this argument to understand the description of George J Capewell's patent. His patent was for an automoated motorised device for a locomotive.
    Not a Robotic device for an autonomous vehicle.

     His invention was for an automated, motorised, wiper for "cars, locomotives, and such land-vehicles".

    So let us look at the definition of automated

    operated by largely automatic equipment.

    And now the definition of autonomous

     having the freedom to govern itself or control its own affairs.



    summary and conclusion

    We can clearly see that an automatic device lacks the ability to govern itself and control it's own affairs.
    In fact, that is the "opposite" of an autonomous device.

    An autonomous device is able to decide for itself what actions need to be taken and what automatic devices require switching on and off.
    Windscreen wipers lack this ability. And they require a human to decide when they should be switched on or off. A windscreen wiper is the "anti-thesis" of a Robotic device. By the fact it is "automated" means it lacks thinking ability, and a Robot is not considered "automatic". A robot has the ability to think and calculate. 

    Some people even speculate that a Robot may actually be consciously aware. Though there is no evidence for this. Nobody speculates that windscreen wipers are consciously aware, and there is nothing to suggest they are, unlike a Robotic device, that does appear to think for itself.

    Thanks to User2006