A computer becoming bored and deciding to make up a tune would be a sign of computer intelligence. — Bitter Crank
In the ancient world, good ideas were thought to come from the gods, or, at any rate, from outside of the self. During the Enlightenment, rationality was the guiding principle, and philosophers sought out procedures for thinking, such as the scientific method, that might result in new knowledge. People back then talked about “imagination,” but their idea of it was less exalted than ours. They saw imagination as a kind of mental scratch pad: a system for calling facts and images to the mind’s eye and for comparing and making connections between them. They didn’t think of the imagination as “creative.” In fact, they saw it as a poor substitute for reality; Hobbes called it “decayed sense.”
It was Romanticism, in the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries, which took the imagination and elevated it, giving us the “creative imagination.” — Joshua Rothman
truly being creative or is just a trick of programming — m-theory
My question is do you believe that these machines are truly being creative or is just a trick of programming in your opinion? — m-theory
A computer can create, just as a monkey can, but is what it creates art? Art is virtually impossible to define as it's so subjective, — Tim3003
Art needs to be a creation with intended communication of something.
It then needs to be combined with a receiver (viewer) of that communication.
The communicated message goes through interpretation by the receiver and the combined event between the communicator and receiver through that art is how I define what art is in its most fundamental form. — Christoffer
No you still in the realm of aesthetics (the philosophy of art) and not estemelyolgy wich I was leaning towards.Am I straying too far from the subject here?
And anyway, who is going to declare that, yes, the A.I. has been creative, an artist or a scientist, or god help us, a critic.
Maybe what is an essential point here is that man alone owns art and does not understand it.
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