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How "Real" is artificial Intelligence?
This would depend on the human.Ziggurat said:If you mean human-level reasoning, we're not even close
That consciousness is dependent on natural phenomena and matter can be easily demonstrated with a baseball bat. Explainable is something else again.Originally posted by Yahweh
(I'm a little skeptical of the following use of reasoning...)
If the human brain works in a way where everything (even consciousness) is expainable by natural phenomena and matter...
It's probably fair to say that most of us are at least a little skeptical about this, but if it is possible, I'd say your time frame is more realistic than what some in the early days proposed.... why shouldnt we eventually be able to build computers that recognize there own existence.
I can't say I agree.Originally posted by TillEulenspiegel
Many people muddy the subject further by introducing the concepts of consiouness and self-awarenessess...
...consciousness need not be addressed as I am of the opinion it is not needed.
Nevertheless, some are going to continue to try to study these things. They may not have hit a wall, but they certainly have at least entered a bog where the going is slow at best, and there are many opportunities to become mired.The question in my mind is wether we run into an epistemological brick wall when we try to study intelligence and consciousness at thier base levels.
TillEulenspiegel said:The problem is our understanding what the I in AI is.....This seems to still be in the realm of the philosophical, the dinner conversations of people like Steven Gould.
The gap is in integration..not in the systems sense but in the cognitive sense. Theres a thing in biology called "Binding", that is the processes of taking disparate streams of data and integrating them to a single outcome or idea. Works like this you hit your hand with a hammer, you see it happen, you hear it happen, you experience pain. All of these separate events occur as different mechanisms in the body at different processing speed in the brain, yet the cognitive reality is it was a single event.
The question in my mind is wether we run into an epistemological brick wall when we try to study intelligence and consciousness at thier base levels.-It reminds me of The Matrix film ,Neo and Cyphers dialog when they're discussing the monitor Cyphers watching and everything's in code. Neo: Do you always look at it encoded? Cypher: Well you have to. The image-translators work for the Construct-Program. But there's way too much information to decode the Matrix..
In other words is the thing that gives rise to us being able to ask such questions able to understand itself at such a fundamental level, of basically what amounts to self-analisys?
I find that I experience a most unpleasant kneejerk reaction to this type of phraseology. I'm hoping that you weren't intending to suggest that such a search would be immoral, but merely a waste of time.Originally posted by Suggestologist
We shouldn't be searching for "Artificial Intelligence".
There is a problem in people's perception of AI. If a task can be broken down into parts and successfully carried out by a computer with an algorithm, people say "that's not really 'thinking', it's just following a recipe". No matter how far AI advances, what has been done gets discounted because people believe that "thinking" is somehow magical.uneasy said:When visiting Pittsburgh once, I saw the fantasic Carnegie Mellon University where they spend millions of dollars to teach a computer to play chess. Then I went downtown, and during rush hour they had the traffic lights controlled by a police officer standing there by a control panel pushing a button.
I don't think the work done in AI has had much to do with actual thinking. Thinking has to have some value or quality to it other than just proving something can be done. But that's just what I think.
I would just like to add that these terms are contentious even when not applied to artificial intelligence. A quick trip to the R&P forum would show that we have no common definition of consciousness or awareness in ourselves or others, let alone in machines. I don't know if we could ever come up with a definition of these concepts that satisfies everybody; even an operational definition (necessarily more narrow) will be a tough sell. (Just as one example, I myself believe that consciousness and self-awareness are entirely fictitious concepts, and that our insistence on describing them is the modern equivalent of spiritualist descriptions of the soul. I also know that there are others here who vehemently disagree with me. I respect their right to be wrong.)arcticpenguin said:
Before trying to involve "consciousness" and "self-awareness", they should be defined, and I suggest it should be an operational definition. If a computer program can do "X", it is conscious. The Turing test is an example, that was an operational way to define "intelligence".
Originally posted by AP
Before trying to involve "consciousness" and "self-awareness", they should be defined, and I suggest it should be an operational definition. If a computer program can do "X", it is conscious. The Turing test is an example, that was an operational way to define "intelligence".
Mercutio said:I would just like to add that these terms are contentious even when not applied to artificial intelligence. A quick trip to the R&P forum would show that we have no common definition of consciousness or awareness in ourselves or others, let alone in machines. I don't know if we could ever come up with a definition of these concepts that satisfies everybody; even an operational definition (necessarily more narrow) will be a tough sell. (Just as one example, I myself believe that consciousness and self-awareness are entirely fictitious concepts, and that our insistence on describing them is the modern equivalent of spiritualist descriptions of the soul. I also know that there are others here who vehemently disagree with me. I respect their right to be wrong.)![]()