Dr. Salam Al Rabadi
2- To what extent can
proactive laws be put in place that are capable of limiting and confronting
these repercussions? Why this global slowdown in setting strict standards for
controlling these developments? Does that future reality require the creation
of a global moral constitution along the lines of the Universal Declaration of
Human Rights?
3- Is there a
political vision at the level of international relations capable of approaching
these strategic challenges?
2- Problematic of
algorithmic bias and societal security.
3-
Problematic of criteria for the concept of algorithmic
justice and cultural dilemmas.
4-
Problematic of emotional computing and the automation
of human nature.
5-
Problematic of technical solutions (modelling) for
climate change.
6-
Problematic of geological wars and future climate
engineering (climate weapons).
7-
Problematic of the ethical and political of
biotechnology (Biotechnical Revolution).
8-
Problematic of governance, accountability and control
related to technology.
9- Problematic of the aura of objectivity that today's culture confers on algorithms and science.
According to those problematics
international relations will face many dialectics related to how technologies change the reality of politics, society, and even
human nature. So, in the future all political
debates will focus on the problematic relationship between politics and
science. It is the relationship that can be expressed through the following
question:
To what extent should societies be directed and controlled by artificial
intelligence and the biotech revolution? And on what terms?
In this context, despite the complexities that will face the problematic of the relationship between science and politics, but the dialectic of the impact of science on human nature will remain the most problematic issue. Accordingly, the question is:
What if
normal biological human evolution was no longer absolutely necessary?
Inevitably, there are many question marks regarding the fears and doubts surrounding developments of artificial intelligence,robots and biotechnologies. Where it seems that there is no longer anything biological link between these developments. So, one of the future issues that will arise in the field of humanities is the problematic of the nature of the human relationship with artificial intelligence and the possibility of its superiority over it, not to mention the many dialectics between humanities, biologists and neuroscientists. This reality will lead to several questions in international relations about technological determinism:
1- Are there new patterns of selection since
robots and biological behaviors control the fate of humanity more than genes?
2- How can these patterns be approached
theoretically and practically at the political level?
3- What are the cultural and ethical values that artificial intelligence and the biotechnical revolution are supposed to adhere to? Who will decide that?
Based on these future
questions, with scientific
considerations intertwined with commercial interests, it became necessary on a
political and moral level for states to intervene, as there are a number of
unethical technologies that have been put under political scrutiny on a global
level The experience of trying to prevent the spread of weapons of mass destruction
or placing strict controls on human cloning experiments may be the best proof
of the possibility of control.
- The biotech revolution.
- Climate change.
- Artificial intelligence and emotional computing.
Therefore, there
are real and realistic question marks and doubts about whether the natural
biological development of humans is no longer necessary at all, as a result of
the developments of artificial intelligence and the biotechnical revolution. Hence, the fact that the problematic of the
issue of the contradiction between the futures of artificial intelligence and
the biotechnical revolution with human nature will inevitably impose itself on
the political and ethical arena. Here, the following problematics should be
raised:
1- Is there an
urgent political need to know what are the natural biological conditions for
human existence?
2- Does the
reality of technology problematic require research into the nature of politics
or the politics of nature?