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The naked ape

Ever since the time of AM Turing people have aspired to machines of human-level intelligence, and I suspect that nothing has really changed in that respect.

I wouldn't agree with your comments about human intelligence being "simply" I/O or "merely" learning and survival instincts. Actually the more I read about these things and actually try to produce some simulations of them the more respect I have for the the sheer complexity and the dizzying levels of sophistication of the human brain compared to the rather crude technologies and methods that we have at the moment. None of the AI systems which anyone has come up with yet get even close to its adaptibility and capacity for imaginative invention.

The ultimate goal for people like Kurzweil or Moravec would be to reach human-level intelligence and then race beyond it into some sort of weird transhuman future. For some of these guys technology seems to have been elevated almost to the status of a religeon. Maybe these sorts of transcendent fantasy could be possible one day, but I think that sort of thing is so far away into the future that any speculations made about it are almost certain to turn out wrong.

- Bob

136 posts.
Thursday 18 July, 17:52
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Smart now, but ....

Okay, human intelligence may seem sophisticated now, but what I was referring to was the extremely simplistic "I/O" used in its evolution from single-celled organisms. Every facet of our intelligence, indeed our psyche, is undeniably an offshoot of our survival instict, whatever way you choose to look at it.

2 posts.
Friday 19 July, 04:19
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tabletop and Dr. Robert French

Dr. French wrote a program called tabletop while he was working at Indiana with Doug Hofstaedter. He documented it in a book called "The Subtelty of Sameness" which focuses on analogy making as part of what makes us human. I think tabletop is a very good approach to modeling human thought, but the program could not learn from its mistakes. It would be interesting to see what would happen if learning were incorporated into it.

I personally think either a Rod Brooks or Doug Hofstaedter approach will end up solving the biggest AI problems we currently face.

Rob

15 posts.
Friday 19 July, 09:57
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