Technology and Human relationships have become closer as innovations take place. Since technology has evolved over the centuries, there have been relationships and bondings of humans with robots. Robots have accomplished inventions alongside humans, there are even restorations and augmentations for people. But do humans need this technology to advance and become better? Robotization will improve the future as the result of the inevitable increase of humans and technology interactions. Augmentation and restoration will help improve humans overall performance and overcome their imperfections. In “The Real Cyborgs” article by Author House, human and robotic interactions are explained, such as by restoration and augmentation means. Restoration …show more content…
The augmentation and restoration balance must be established so that human and cyborg ethical guidelines are ratified. In the “Our Robotic Future” article, robot roles and possible future of …show more content…
According to the ‘In Defense of Killer Robots” article by Rosa Brooks, computers and other machines are “excellent in crisis and combat situations.” Brooks explains how it is the human influence that causes the robotic actions. When humans give the command or order, the robots do as instructed. Fully autonomous robots also have their programmed software. Clearly, robots and other machinery follow human orders, but these orders can be forms of “fallible human decision-making.” In the “Better than Human: Why Robots will - and Must - Take Our Jobs” article by Kevin Kelly, the current “automations has eliminated all but 1 percent of their jobs” and the machines have replaced the humans and work animals of the manual labor. There are jobs that humans can do, but machines can do better. There are also jobs that humans will soon “accept … robotic intelligence and service.” Kelly is stating how the robotic and human synergy benefits for completing the tasks. Even though machines may be more efficient and there is human bonding with robots, there are still the blurred lines of augmentation and restoration of human