Which directly contradicts the statement in episode 2:
Obi-Wan: “Well if droids could think, there’d be none of us here, would there?”
If we accept Obi-Wan’s characterization, then those droids may be able to operate independently, but they aren’t actually thinking.
Again, I think a lot of Star Wars media has leaned towards making droids people and not just walking computers with a friendly ui. It’s convenient for storytelling because it’s easier to write and allows for droid characters to play larger roles and be more relatable to the audience.
But from a world building perspective it creates a lot of unfortunate implications and just makes less sense. The existence of truly intelligent robots should fundamentally alter the world but it never does.
Which directly contradicts the statement in episode 2:
Obi-Wan: “Well if droids could think, there’d be none of us here, would there?”
If we accept Obi-Wan’s characterization, then those droids may be able to operate independently, but they aren’t actually thinking.
Again, I think a lot of Star Wars media has leaned towards making droids people and not just walking computers with a friendly ui. It’s convenient for storytelling because it’s easier to write and allows for droid characters to play larger roles and be more relatable to the audience.
But from a world building perspective it creates a lot of unfortunate implications and just makes less sense. The existence of truly intelligent robots should fundamentally alter the world but it never does.