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Updated on Apr 06, 18
Created on Jul 31, 11
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February 21, 2001
The complexities of the mind mirror the challenges of Artificial Intelligence. This article discusses the nature of thought itself-can it be replicated in a machine? From Ray Kurzweil's revolutionary book The Age of Intelligent Machines, published in 1990.
Just as in the Thinking Matter controversy of the 17th and 18th centuries, most of this modern discussion has tended to be entirely aprioristic, as though questions about the possibilities of computing machines can be fully understood without any experience of implementing them or their resulting behaviour.
Pure thought experiments - without any possibility of detailed analysis or genuine experimentation - can be quite hopeless in these circumstances. To illustrate with a parody of Searle's line of argument, we might argue like this:
Imagine that I were to write a 100-line computer program that conversed in perfect English, in such a way as to pass the Turing Test. Surely we wouldn't call such a simple program genuinely "intelligent". Hence passing the Turing Test cannot be sufficient for genuine intelligence.
The obvious fallacy here is that no 100-line computer program could possibly be anything like that powerful, so the hypothetical experiment is useless. And likewise, it might be suggested, there is no value in trying to draw conclusions about possibilities from a pure thought experiment like Searle's Chinese Room, until we have some appreciation of what sort of processing would be required to make it feasible.
Hubert Dreyfus Wrote What Computers Can't Do
Turing conjectured that a machine with 1GB of memory could pass this test in 2000, but he was wrong.
History of the Stored-Program Computer from 1800 Jacquard Loom and Babbage's Analytical Engine
The term cognition is used in several different loosely related ways. In psychology it is used to refer to the mental processes of an individual, with particular relation to a view that argues that the mind has internal mental states (such as beliefs, desires and intentions) and can be understood in terms of information processing, especially when a lot of abstraction or concretization is involved, or processes such as involving knowledge, expertise or learning for example are at work.
Cognition is commonly known as Thinking
What Is Thinking???
Thinking is the process whereby these mental representations are manipulated. The process of thinking transforms these representations into a new and different form. The transformation may be made:
"“Sometimes philosophers clutch an insupportable hypothesis to their bosoms and run headlong over the cliff edge,” Dennett writes in a 1995 essay, “The Unimagined Preposterousness of Zombies: Commentary on Moody, Flanagan, and Polger,” in the Journal of Consciousness Studies. “Then, like cartoon characters, they hang there in midair, until they notice what they have done and gravity takes over.” I agree with Dennett about this, and about much else (including Darwin and religion), but here, his image in incomplete. The trouble with philosophers is that gravity doesn’t take over. They continue to cycle in midair, legs a-blur."
7 items | 8 visits
Results of quick googling
Updated on Apr 06, 18
Created on Jul 31, 11
Category: Computers & Internet
URL: