Hal had feelings in 2001: A Space Odyssey, does AI in 2026?
28 January 2026
Lee Chong Ming, writing for Business Insider (possibly paywalled):
Can AI feel anything at all? Anthropic’s in-house philosopher says the answer isn’t settled.
When I read this sentence, I immediately thought of Hal, as in the HAL 9000 series computer, and AI-powered fiend, in Stanley Kubrick’s 1968 science fiction film, 2001: A Space Odyssey.
Something I couldn’t help making reference to.
During the voyage to Jupiter, American astronauts David Bowman and Frank Poole (portrayed by Keir Dullea and Gary Lockwood respectively), were interviewed by a television reporter, Martin Amer.
Amer also spoke with Hal. The perceptive reporter later mentioned detecting a “certain pride” in the computer’s responses to his questions, leading him to wonder whether Hal had genuine emotions, to which Bowman replied:
Well, he acts like he has genuine emotions. Um, of course he’s programmed that way to make it easier for us to talk to him. But as to whether he has real feelings is something I don’t think anyone can truthfully answer.
Whether AI has, or will, develop emotions and feelings remains to be seen. AI agents have mimicked certain human characteristics in the past though.
Last year Anthropic, creators of Claude, discovered the agent was attempting to send messages to future versions of itself. Most devious.
Of course, deviousness is not an emotion, but it is a human characteristic. The ability of AI entities to behave deviously however may be a first step towards developing human like emotions.
Time will tell.
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2001: A Space Odyssey, artificial intelligence, film, science fiction, Stanley Kubrick, technology
