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Murderbot, or When AI Just Wants to Watch Soap Operas • Superhero Ethics • Episode 368

Murderbot, or When AI Just Wants to Watch Soap Operas

What happens when an AI doesn’t want freedom—it just wants to binge soap operas? In this episode, we explore Martha Wells’ Murderbot Diaries through both the books and Apple TV series, examining one of science fiction’s most compelling questions: can synthetic intelligence want something other than liberation? Murderbot is a security unit (SecUnit) with hacked programming that could escape entirely, but instead chooses to stay close to humans while watching thousands of hours of the melodramatic space opera “Sanctuary Moon.”

Join Matthew and returning guest Rob McKenzie as they unpack the ethics of synthetic life, enslaved sentience, and why freedom for an individual can only come on their own terms.

Questions we explored:

  • What makes Murderbot different from typical AI characters who either want to destroy humanity or be fully human?
  • Why doesn’t Murderbot want to lead a revolution to free other SecUnits?
  • What happens when you offer your version of freedom to someone who genuinely doesn’t want it?
  • What parallels exist between involuntary commitment, disability guardianship, and AI rights?
  • Can you truly own a sentient being just because they’re made of manufactured parts?

Topics covered: Murderbot Diaries, Martha Wells, AI ethics, synthetic intelligence, consent and autonomy, disability rights, gender identity, Apple TV series, science fiction

Matthew Fox and Riki explore the ethical questions from the stories geeks love—superheroes, sci-fi, anime, fantasy, video games, and so much more.