Monday 13 July 2015

The Terminator, Part 2


Terminator 2 : Judgment Day

When a cold, steely metal skeleton emerged from the smoky screens in October 1984, we knew a star has been born. Arnold Schwarzenegger, with his portray of the Terminator, became one of the ultimate superstars in Hollywood, and the stone-faced robot has always been his most iconic role. James Cameron, on the other hand, went on to direct more science fiction spectacles. They both know that they have to keep the promise – ‘I’ll be back’ – so they decided to continue the wonderful story of humans vs. machines. This time, they had a larger budget, they developed a greater and more humanistic storyline, and they were more than willing to put the visual effects to its very limit. The result was TERMINATOR 2 : JUDGMENT DAY, the top-grossing film of 1991. It received 4 Oscars, and was considered as the most popular and technically brilliant Terminator film in the series. At least, it was considered on equal terms with the original Terminator film. The moving story has asked so many questions about technology and the human condition in general, and this film will be the focus of this article.


Like the other Terminator films, Terminator 2 (abbreviated as ‘T2’ thereafter) followed an easily recognizable plot, but let’s start with some background. In ‘Terminator 1’, Sarah Connor has killed the Terminator who was supposed to terminate her, in a factory of the Cyberdyne Corporation. Cyberdyne was actually a company which produced artificial intelligence appliances for the country, including the military-related products. Due to the termination of the robot, one of its metallic arms and its chip resided in the factory, which was soon discovered. Unaware of their origins, the company carried out research on these components, which led to the development of a super computer – ‘Skynet’. Skynet, as it would turn out, was the ‘boss’ of all the machines and terminators. Eventually, Skynet caused a ‘Judgment Day’, which wiped out almost the whole human civilizations, on 29th August, 1997. The terminators, still believing they could manipulate the past, decided to try again and send a more advanced terminator, a T-1000 model, back to 1995 to kill John Connor. On the other, the future John is aware of this plan and therefore he also sends a re-programmed T-800 robot, which has an uncanny resemblance in terms of appearance to the first terminator, back through time to save him. Our story begins...



Both terminators arrived in 1995, for which the T-1000 has acquired the clothes of a policeman, and the T-800 has acquired the clothes from a biker club, and also an ultra-cool Winchester-type rifle. Both robots began to track down John Connor. John was now under the care of his foster parents, as Sarah was locked into a mental hospital due to her intrusion into the Cyberdyne building. After some efforts, T-800 was able to find John, and they narrowly escaped the attack from T-1000. That involved Guns and Roses, a giant truck smashing the way through, and a wonderful bike-jumping stunt. While there were misconceptions at first, John and the Terminator came to trust each other and John was able to command ‘his terminator’ to do good things. They tried to contact John’s foster parents, yet the T-1000 has already terminated them. Then, John decided he would have to save Sarah. Though the strategic assessment seemed to point to negative, T-800 complied with John’s order. They broke into the mental hospital, and quite unfortunately the T-1000 has also intruded into that. After another brief chase, Sarah escaped again with John and T-800, yet she was furious because she felt that John was risking his life, causing disappointment to John. They retreated to a small isolated house to treat their wounds, and (in the Director’s cut), John and Sarah re-programmed the robot from a ‘Read-Only’ to a ‘learning’ mode. When they set off the next day, John attempted to teach the robot to become more human, like saying ‘Hasta la vista, baby’ and so on. They came to a friend’s compound to acquire heavy firearms, including a Gatling-type minigun and also a grenade launcher. It was there their relationships improved, and the T-800 fed them with information about the ‘Judgment Day’. He stated that when the Skynet was online in 1997, it learnt in a geometrical rate that it eventually became self-aware, fearing its human creators would ‘terminate’ itself. When the humans attempted to pull the plug, Skynet decided to fight back and eventually led to the inception of ‘Judgment Day’. Upon learning all these, Sarah decided to re-write history by killing the chief scientist, Dyson, who was responsible for the research regarding Skynet. While John pleaded with him to stop Sarah, T-800 was reluctant about that, as it was quite possible to invite attack from T-1000.


They eventually arrived at Dyson’s house to stop Sarah, and T-800 exposed his metallic arm to tell Dyson who he is. Dyson, totally unaware of the hell he would soon create, agreed to take the trio to Cyberdyne to destroy Skynet. Their antics soon attracted the attention of the police, and a SWAT team was sent to take care of these dangerous individuals. John was afraid that his killer robot would cause a massacre, yet after stating ‘Trust Me’, T-800 used his Gatling minigun to blast off every single police cars, while sparing the cops’ lives. The SWAT team led a sudden attack on the trio, wounding Dyson at the same time. After the trio escaped by an elevator (!), Dyson sacrificed himself by blowing up the whole Cyberdyne building, while the trio took hold of the terminator arm and chip.




They escaped the building, yet the T-1000 was closing on them. T-1000 used a helicopter to cause the trio’s SWAT van, and after the crash, he rode on a liquid-nitrogen tanker and continued to pursuit the trio. Eventually, both vehicles crashed into a steel mill and the ruptured tanker led to a massive outpour of liquid nitrogen. The T-1000 was frozen, and with a bullet, it was scattered into pieces.







Unfortunately, that has not terminated the liquid metal cyborg. With the heat in the steel mill, the metal components were able to reform and T-1000 came back to life, albeit with evident malfunctioning. T-800 asked John and Sarah to go, and attempted to fight against the superior T-1000. This proved to be futile, as T-1000 easily subdued T-800. When T-1000 was getting closer to his target, with a demonstration of caliber, T-800 used the grenade launcher to pop a big hole in T-1000’s body, and after a big explosion, his body parts were almost all out of place. Losing his balance, T-1000 fell into the molten steel, and was terminated as a result!



With his mission successful, T-800 asked John to throw the metallic arm and also the chip into the molten steel. Yet, he stated he also has to be terminated, because this could then prevent the terminators from existence, restoring the integrity of the time-universe. Because he could not self-terminate, he asked Sarah to help him. John cried and asked the terminator not to go. ‘I understand why you cry now, but that’s something I can never do’. The learning robot finally could appreciate the values of humanity. Sarah lowered the T-800 into the molten steel, destroying it as a result. Finally, as Sarah and John were travelling towards an unknown future, Sarah stated that -

‘The unknown future rolls toward us. I face it, for the first time, with a sense of hope. Because if a machine, a Terminator, can learn the value of human life, maybe we can too.’  



One of the ultimate reasons why T2 is considered as the best in the series is because it is the most moving one, the one which most audience can identify with. This is mainly due to an almost warm-hearted Terminator, who is sort of a father figure for the vulnerable John. Some audience even wept at the end of T2! This addresses the main theme of Terminator 2 – can a robot or machine become more ‘human’?


In T2, the key reason why the Terminator scenario emerges is because Skynet, the supercomputer, becomes self-aware. That means that the computer becomes more ‘human’, and starts to develop paranoia about its human creators. What is the big deal about a machine becoming more like a human? This is really critical – as that means a robot is evolving into something it is NOT of its nature. It is challenging the possible boundary between human and machine.




Before we go any further, we have to define the key issues regarding this. A first condition is – can a robot possess learning capacities that will enable it to possess human attributes, and what will be the consequences of that? The machines, being humane, will have to confront questions which is unprecedented for their existences, which is obviously beyond their implanted programming. Ethical questions that we humans often end up in dilemma do not exclude a ‘human-like’ machine, and indeed there are real examples for this. An example is the ‘A-Robot’, which rescues victims from dangerous situations. When the A-Robot is only required to save one victim, it is likely to succeed. However, when 2 victims are present in the situation, how will the A-Robot react? Two outcomes are observed. First, the A-Robot is fast enough to optimize its track to save BOTH victims. However, it is the second outcome that is disturbing – the A-Robot, having no clue which victim to save first, just stops and DOES NOTHING. This is certainly disastrous, and it illustrates that providing an ethical dimension to these machines is the most challenging task of A. I. design.


The first question is, what are the requirements for a robot to become a human? This is never a straight-forward question, as the human condition is a topic that has fascinated and troubled lovers of wisdom for thousands of years. At every era, we have our own conceptions of humanity, and these ideas are challenged and refined as time goes by.

The likely starting point is the development of self-awareness. That means it is aware of own self, and aware of itself as a wholesome unity. The philosopher Spinoza has pointed out that, for a human being, the ultimate motivation of life is self-preservation, literally, to survive. That is why Skynet is so wary of human’s actions when it becomes self-aware. When its boss pulls the plug, it knows that it is his end. Yet, the computer may not be aware that, if it wants to take the attributes of human, it also leads to take the undesirable bits. Unlike a machine, human existence is a being-towards-death, as Heidegger would have put it. It is a truth that in no way can be challenged. Since the time travels irreversibly, it is therefore futile for the machines to send robots back in time to ‘fix things up’ – their rise is predicated by whatever cause-and-effect that leads up to that stage, rather than their efforts to rewrite history. A human subject has cognitive power. That is the famous statement by Descartes,’ I think, therefore I am’. This is also a theme prevalent in ‘Blade Runner’, which I will discuss soon. Yet, the cognito by Descartes or Spinoza was a rational one, and they couldn’t quite reconcile the presence of emotion in the rational mind. They tried to get around by illustrating the presence of a ‘soul’, yet it was not well-defined (with no empirical psychology) and so these ideas remained vague.

So how can a robot fit into all these criteria?  A machine certainly has a material presence. In an ideal manner, the machines are programmed through commands, so they can reason in a rational and mechanical manner, and in some cases optimize towards a best outcome when alternative choices exist. Yet, there will always be an empty hole inherent in all machines – the incapability of emotion. This, unfortunately, is what makes a machine a machine – indeed, why does the humans, or at a later stage, Skynet, program all the terminators to a read-only mode? Because they do not want the robots to be too ‘clever’, let alone being capable of compassion. So, the master will always exert control over their slaves. Even if a terminator really shows emotion, it seems to serve an instrumental purpose, a ‘means’ to trap its targets or victims. When T-1000 said ‘I know it hurts’ after stabbing Sarah in the steel mill, do you think he says this out of compassion? Machines may have the concept of emotion – like T-800 saying ‘I understand why you cry now’ rather than subjectively feeling it – but they are very unlikely to feel or experience it.

A further point about cognition is worth looking at here, as it also relates to the mechanism of machine learning. It is the philosopher John Searle’s ‘Chinese Room Argument’. Searle quotes this argument because he wants to illustrate a possible mode of learning, in particular language learning. What he is saying is that, when one is learning characters, they learn it in a coding way, by corresponding one character to a relevant description. So, it is like a mathematical function, with a one-on-one mapping. While you may map all the relations precisely, you do not really understand the inherent meanings of any of these. It is like a picture-matching exercise, when you do the matching mechanically. Indeed, terminators may work in such a way, when they are devoid of emotion. They match the possible solutions to a given task, and execute that mechanically. Even if their ‘detailed files’ in their CPU consist of concepts of emotion and sentiment, they will just match it mechanically, for example when a bullet crashes into its body the word ‘Pain’ shows in its visual display as a datum. They will not feel the pain or understand the inherent meanings of their experiences.

When the CPU of a terminator is reset, it acquires learning capabilities. T-800 states that its CPU is a neural net processor, which has a capability to build up knowledge. However, it is also likely to develop into uncertain frontiers. When Skynet is learning at ‘geometric rate’, no one will know how intelligence, and ‘human’, it can get to. This seems rightfully as an allegory of our relationships to technology. With the advent of machines and technology, human’s teleological endpoint is very much governed by that of technology. With an over-reliance on ‘techs’, their developments facilitate us to a future that we may not be prepared to confront.

I have been talking loads about machines and programming, yet the most relevant issue regarding human-machine interactions is the ethical implications of robotics. Ethical decisions, in many cases, entail subjective value judgments, which may lead to dilemma or unpredictable outcomes. If humans are so vulnerable to these dilemmas, will the logical robots be up to the challenges? It may not be the case. Indeed, Asimov has dictated 3 rules regarding robotics. Though it was dictated some 70 years ago, this gentleman had the clear insights to foresee a future we would be acquainted with. The point of the 3 rules is to counteract against a machine's potential self-preservation. That means if the machine really becomes self-aware for some reasons, there is still a set of logical guidelines to prevent it from becoming too paranoid about others. While these rules may be heuristically useful for a machine to determine the best pathway to optimize an outcome, we cannot rule out the cases that it will come to ‘Hobson’s choice’-type decisions,  for which harm will be inflicted to certain parties. Therefore, while robotics can aid humans to carry out tasks that may be too risky or challenging, there is no way that machine intelligence can completely substitute, or even replace human intelligence, as there is no unique way to ensure the best answer at all circumstances.





The nature of T-1000


T-1000, the bad guy in T2, is an extremely iconic sci-fi character, as he possesses strong caliber and is almost undefeatable. Indeed, this is a very creative character, as it not only addresses very novel scientific concepts, but also serves important cultural allegorical meanings. T-1000 is a robot made from a liquid metal, and it lacked a ‘central’ processor that controlled it. At first sight, it is a hard phenomenon to comprehend as we have no way to figure out where is the ‘brain’ that controls this scary monster. Yet if we look at this at another angle, we can see that its unity is constructed from the thousands of components that formed it – that is why T-1000 is a ‘shape-shifting’ creature, it just flows like a liquid. The components can be categorized as a large bundle, which have to come together to form the whole unit. For a primitive case, I can think of a short story by Edgar Allan Poe, ‘The Man Who Was Used Up’. In that rather gross story, a ‘brave’ general, due to humiliation and torture from enemies, suffered a bodily damage, which was so severe that he was actually nothing more than an assortment of all his body parts, which they had to be assembled by a servant every morning, to form the final, ‘human-looking’ general. This was a scary scenario, yet Mr. Poe was so insightful to perceive such a possibility. The general was a human bundle, and he looked more like a cyborg than a genuine human. So, don’t be tempted to ask where is T-1000 central chip, it is just everywhere in all its components. In a cultural perspective, T-1000 can also be seen as an allegory of a ‘rhizome’ (Deleuze / Guattari) – which is a geographical area where there are no central controlling spots, yet relationships are inherent between every component. These de-centralized areas are prevalent in a post-modern era, and the Terminator films certainly address them promptly.


'No fate'?


'The future is not set. There's no fate but what we make for ourselves.' - Sarah Connor

One of the ultimate reasons why I am so fascinated with T2, which I believe why other audiences find particularly moving, can be summarized in 2 words – ‘No Fate’. When I first watched it, I was so moved by this statement that I believe I have the courage, at least to attempt to change things around me. When I grow up and understand more about life, I have more reservations about this optimistic outlook. Indeed, Sarah, John and T800 did believe they have prevented Judgment Day from taking place, after blowing up Cyberdyne and killing T-1000. Yet, soon they know that it is not the case – the Judgment Day will take place anyway, all they can do is to postpone it. It seems that a determinism / fatalism is already installed in the equation, and the so-called ‘free will’ is just a hallucinatory illusion. Well, the reason why this question is so controversial is because it challenges the very foundation of human wisdom itself. It is pushing the frontier of Metaphysics, the ever-lasting ‘Free will vs. Determinism’ debate. Though philosophical investigations are not essential for human well-being, this controversy does have strong implications, for example, ethical judgments.


For me, this is a futile debate. It is not because I don’t want to take sides, but because we have no way to agree on a scope of the question. Everyone’s frame of reference can be different, and no one can perceive what the ‘ultimate reality’ is like – the big question is, when is the end of story that will determine who wins? When you feel that you have exercised a free will and changed something, is that really the end point? When is the ‘season’s finale’ that will allow you to assert your power to control fate? Humans can often be subject to a consequentialism and analyze the appropriateness of their past actions through known outcomes. That is why there is no point to devote time to pursuit this question, as that offers no existential benefits to one’s life.


Still, ‘No Fate’ is inspiring. From a psychological perspective, it fulfills the ‘self-actualization’ purpose of human existence. At least, a false consciousness of free will can provide us with a courage to change and fight for our well-being, to improve ourselves. In T2, we can see that the trio often exercises their own free wills to do something they firmly believe in their hearts. They may not be able to prevent the ultimate disaster eventually, yet they will have no regret in their decision, at least, they will be back when the machines rise again! ‘No Fate’ is a motto that can motivate us forward towards insurmountable task that gives us the bravery to fight the adversity like a warrior (or terminator if you want to be one). Only when you know you have given out everything you have, rather than sitting down like a coward, will you achieve a peace in your mind. 



You may not know what the future will be like, but you have every reason to fight for it!

Next time: How do the Terminator films help us to make sense of the modern condition?

(2/3)

by Ed Law
13/7/2015

Film Analysis - 50