I think The Whispering Earring is a fundamentally different thing—its broad message is “automation will atrophy the skills that make us human”, which is a pretty common message in sci-fi, and distinct from “isolation from human feedback will remove a necessary check on our worst impulses”, which I think is what OP was asking about.
Reason, as far as I know, is about robots attributing religious significance to their designated function. I don’t think it fits either. It’s an interesting take on aligning superficially human-like AI, though.
Robbie is closer, in that it broaches the idea of isolation from human interaction, but Mrs. Weston is portrayed as being in the wrong for disrupting a genuine friendship between her daughter and the robot.
To answer OP’s question, The Veldt is the closest thing that comes immediately to mind. Children raised by a machine-nursery become obsessed with the instant gratification it provides, and develop dangerously uncanny behavior as a result.
In Reason the religious robot at one point starts to convince the human engineers that maybe the religious robot is right, but in the end the human engineers hold onto to their priors that humans created robots.
I think The Whispering Earring is a fundamentally different thing—its broad message is “automation will atrophy the skills that make us human”, which is a pretty common message in sci-fi, and distinct from “isolation from human feedback will remove a necessary check on our worst impulses”, which I think is what OP was asking about.
Reason, as far as I know, is about robots attributing religious significance to their designated function. I don’t think it fits either. It’s an interesting take on aligning superficially human-like AI, though.
Robbie is closer, in that it broaches the idea of isolation from human interaction, but Mrs. Weston is portrayed as being in the wrong for disrupting a genuine friendship between her daughter and the robot.
To answer OP’s question, The Veldt is the closest thing that comes immediately to mind. Children raised by a machine-nursery become obsessed with the instant gratification it provides, and develop dangerously uncanny behavior as a result.
In Reason the religious robot at one point starts to convince the human engineers that maybe the religious robot is right, but in the end the human engineers hold onto to their priors that humans created robots.