| Stories expected to appear in the Wednesday, Jan. 23, edition of The ...
Vaccines aren't just for kids, but far too few grown-ups are rolling up their sleeves, disappointed federal health officials reported Wednesday. MISINFORMATION STUDY: A study by two nonprofit journalism organizations found that President Bush and top administration officials issued hundreds of false statements about the national security threat from Iraq in the two years following the 2001 terrorist attacks. THOMPSON: Republican Fred Thompson, the actor-politician who attracted more attention as a potential presidential candidate than as a real one, quit the race for the White House on Tuesday after a string of poor finishes in early primary and caucus states. LEDGER DIES: Heath Ledger, the talented 28-year-old actor who gravitated toward dark, brooding roles that defied his leading-man looks, was found dead Tuesday in a Manhattan apartment, facedown at the foot of his bed with prescription sleeping pills nearby, police said.
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If it only had a heart: Can robots behave humanely?
We could reduce man's inhumanity to man through technology," he said. Peter Asaro, a computer scientist and sociologist with the Center for the Critical Analysis of Contemporary Culture at Rutgers University, countered that scientists should not dignify what he considers the naive notion that robots can be programmed to kill, but only in an ethical fashion. Asaro said computer scientists should oppose the design of robots with the ability to make killing decisions before the technology becomes widely dispersed. "We have an opportunity with autonomy in weapons systems to think about how to control their development," he said, suggesting that society "ban them or at least restrict their use." The discussion of robot ethics raised questions of definitions.
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