"MonkeePuzzle" (monkeypuzzle)
05/15/2019 at 14:32 • Filed to: None | 1 | 11 |
Mercedes Streeter
> MonkeePuzzle
05/15/2019 at 14:38 | 4 |
Tripper
> MonkeePuzzle
05/15/2019 at 14:47 | 2 |
I’d imagine the LFA has a similar outlook on life.
nerd_racing
> MonkeePuzzle
05/15/2019 at 14:48 | 1 |
What’s the point?
MonkeePuzzle
> Tripper
05/15/2019 at 14:49 | 2 |
engine capable of a bajillion miles and hour, and they use to me to go grocery shopping *infinite sigh*
Tripper
> MonkeePuzzle
05/15/2019 at 14:52 | 1 |
Exactly
benjrblant
> MonkeePuzzle
05/15/2019 at 15:02 | 3 |
this is good kinja
Monkey B
> MonkeePuzzle
05/15/2019 at 16:34 | 0 |
“ stupid human”
WRXforScience
> MonkeePuzzle
05/15/2019 at 17:06 | 0 |
He was a robot, not an android. All mechanical but with an artificial personality and the brain the size of a planet (metaphorically).
MonkeePuzzle
> WRXforScience
05/15/2019 at 17:07 | 0 |
yes, Marvin the Paranoid Robot...
WRXforScience
> MonkeePuzzle
05/15/2019 at 17:12 | 0 |
So I got curious and looked it up and apparently androids just have to be humanlike and don’t have to incorporate any human or organic parts or thoughts. However, in contemporary usage androids are either robots with organic or pseudo-organic parts (including robots with human consciousness or brains).
Describing Marvin as an android is technically correct (the best kind).
MonkeePuzzle
> WRXforScience
05/15/2019 at 17:18 | 0 |
although I do agree with you, I would technically describe him as a robot, not an android by more accepted terminology. obviously the android designation is simply to rhyme with his state of mind.
of course, technically both are correct:
The word was coined from the Greek root - andr -, “man” (male, as opposed to - anthrp -, human being) and the suffix -oid , “having the form or likeness of”. [6] In Greek, however, is an adjective. While the term “android” is used in reference to human-looking robots in general, a robot with a female appearance can also be referred to as a “ gynoid ”.
The word robot was introduced to the public by the Czech interwar writer Karel apek in his play R.U.R. (Rossum’s Universal Robots) , published in 1920. [72] The play begins in a factory that uses a chemical substitute for protoplasm to manufacture living, simplified people called robots. The play does not focus in detail on the technology behind the creation of these living creatures, but in their appearance they prefigure modern ideas of androids , creatures who can be mistaken for humans.