The Matrix Dystopian

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In the movie known as The Matrix, a dystopian future is filled with robots harvesting humans for energy. There are many aspects of cognitive science that be can be applied to in the movie. Computer science and Artificial Intelligence topics like computationalism and the universal Turing test can be observed in the movie. In addition, philosophical topics like Plato’s cave and even Psychology are apparent too. First off, computationalism can be seen in the movie. Since computationalism states that “intelligent behavior can be explained by the agent’s cognitive system”(Piccinini, 2009), the machines or “agents” in the movie tend to display intelligent behavior like those of a human. Unlike a human, however, they have a tendency to speak and act in a very punctilious and mechanical way.But, nonetheless, it’s said that in the movie the agents are incognito and are said to be indistinguishable from that of a human. Neo, who is a victim of the Matrix, doesn’t realize this until Morpheus tells him the truth.In fact, in this dystopian world, artificial intelligence has reached a revolutionary milestone in which they’ve passed Turing’s test and deceived humans believe they are human. But what might have caused this? A well-known topic in Artificial …show more content…

Neo, like many of his fellow human beings in the Matrix, is led to believe that the world in which he is living in is real. But as the audience might learn later the world he’s living in is in fact not real. Highly intelligent machines have created this simulated world to their advantage. With this in mind, one can see how this relates to Plato’s Allegory of the Cave in which a group of chained prisoners are led to believe that the shadows they see on the wall are as close as they can get to viewing reality. But as the allegory reveals, there’s more to their reality in that the shadows are actually humans passing by a

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