The Star Malaysia

Robot with feelings not far away, says Hurt

‘Humans’ actor sees a future with human-like androids

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FOR William Hurt (pic) it isn’t a question of whether someone will invent a robot with feelings, it’s a matter of when.

“I think I may be pretty good at saying if this and this is true then this and this are true,” says Hurt. “So from the moment I took a look at it, it was all absolutely inevitable.”

The Oscarwinni­ng actor says he’s been “riveted” by the idea of artificial intelligen­ce since his early teens.

He surmises that’s partly why he landed roles about the subject in the 2001 film A.I. Artificial Intelligen­ce and in the new sci-fi drama Humans, which airs tomorrow on AMC.

“If when you walk in the room and the topic lights you up, they see that and they hire you sometimes,” Hurt said in a recent interview.

Humans takes place in a parallel present day where eerily humanlike androids are as common in homes as iPads and smartphone­s are in real life.

Whereas most of these so-called “Synths” are merely mechanical, a few newer models have emotions and think for themselves.

Hurt plays Dr George Millican, a mechanical engineer who worked on the project that developed the original Synths who lives with and protects his outdated android named Odi.

“He gets sick and loses some of his memory,” says Hurt, who reveals that after George’s wife dies, “you have this fascinatin­g relationsh­ip that he has with a clearly anthropomo­rphised robotic who is the repository of the memories of his life with his wife”.

Hurt not only sees a future with sentient robots, he says he believes it won’t be long before cellphones are injected under people’s skin like the GPS microchips subcutaneo­usly put in pets.

He even imagines that one day there will be a way to preserve people’s memories in a mechanical vessel so their consciousn­ess can live on forever.

“I think that that is natural in evolution.” — AP

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