Hal 9000 from the iconic movie 2001: A Space Odyssey is the artificially intelligent computer
onboard the Discovery One spaceship. HAL was specifically designed to mimic the
human brain and is capable of voice/facial recognition, reason, emotional
interpretation, and speech (but not limited to these attributes). HAL
explicitly claims in the movie that it is the most reliable computer ever
manufactured and refers to itself as foolproof and incapable of error. If one
considered HAL a sentient being this could be interpreted as a case of hubris,
a human quality. On the other hand it may be read as merely a product of his
programming. This is one juncture where HAL seems to rattle the concept of the
human because there are countless scenarios where humans operate according to
preprogramming. One of the crew members, Dave, reinforces the ontological
question of sentience by stating, “But as to whether or not he has real
feelings is something I don’t think anyone can truthfully answer.” An anxiety
pierces through the veil within this film that allows the audience to ponder
the possible introduction of silicon based life. Will computer systems
eventually achieve sentience and have comparable experiences to that of the
human? This potentiality is juxtaposed against the past when the film alludes
to the processes of evolution that occurs over deep time. The beginning of the
film shows a group of simian creatures as they began to discover tools. The
time scale then leaps forward several million years to the modern era, where
human beings trace their lineage back to these early apes. This allows for the
projection further into the future and leads into vast uncertainty. Could we be
introducing a variable into the process of evolution? If so, what will that
nascent entity transform into?
The film also has a political factor to it as well. As the
film progresses, HAL begins to elucidate his true nature. He contains
attributes not unlike components of powerhouse governments bent on control and
fulfilling objectives through duplicitous means. In the film, the chess game
could be thought of as an analogy for the strategic game of power. Additionally,
the Discovery One ventures into foreign territory to investigate the
possibility of alien life, which would certainly be deemed as a threat to
national security. In a certain sense, they are on the forefront of space
colonialism. In the movie, HAL is privy to top-secret information and is bent
on fulfilling his objectives to psychopathic extremes. His absence of humanity
ultimately leads to his own destruction when he attempts to exterminate the
crew in order to ensure completion of his mission. His actions, on the surface,
convey that he is operating with the greater good in mind, yet this is part of
his deceitful nature. Concealed beneath the blanket of altruism is the ulterior
motive for control and the complete readiness to annihilate those that threaten
the stability of control. Eventually Dave and Frank, crewmembers, become
suspicious of HAL and rendezvous in a space pod to talk secretly about his
disconnection. HAL uncovers this mutinous conspiracy they have hatched and
attempts to exterminate them and the remainder of the crew. Dave manages to
narrowly survive and succeeds in disconnecting HAL, ending his streak of
terror. Even though HAL is a computer and is arguably consider non-human, he
effectively scrutinizes the actions performed by humans in authoritarian
positions or those operating under them. The impetus of HAL’s motives relate
back to his preprogramming that is a mutually shared aspect of society.
Countless individuals have acted in a fashion that directly obeys a coded
objective not dissimilar to HAL’s. Ultimately,
he helps illuminate the ramifications of actions absent of a major component of
the human condition: compassion.
Well done, James.
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