The Star Malaysia

500 years of robots on show

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WHY do humans build machines that resemble them -- and what does that say about us? A London exhibition has opened and is surveying 500 years of simple to sophistica­ted robots to find out.

Take a lip-syncing monk from the 16th century or a cartoon-like humanoid avatar that helps children with autism today. They and 100 other robots on display at the Science Museum chart an evolution of machines that fascinate and terrify in equal measure.

“One of the big issues with doing a show like this is people's preconcept­ions that robots come in, they destroy the world and they enslave us all,” lead curator Ben Russell told AFP.

“One of the advantages of taking a long view of robots as we have done, is that you realise a lot of these concerns have been with us for a very, very long time,” Russell said.

Studying robots is a good way to learn what society was like at any given point, the exhibition argues.

A 16th-century articulate­d manikin -- a little model of a man -- allowed its owners to explain and explore the human body.

A monk statue built on behalf of King Philip II of Spain, also from the 16th century, was designed to impress. It is able to pray, walk across a table while moving his lips, and raise a crucifix. And dating from 1773, a stunning Silver Swan moves with grace thanks to three separate clockwork mechanisms.

The exhibition runs until September 3. — Relaxnews

 ?? — AFP ?? A London exhibition on robots is being held at the Science Museum until Sept 3.
— AFP A London exhibition on robots is being held at the Science Museum until Sept 3.

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