See, I don't think that any element, nor the totality, of those systems, has the reflexive first-person knowledge of being, or experience of being, that humans have, or are; it is not an 'I'. So, sure, you could feasibly create an incredibly clever system, that could answer questions and engage in dialogue, but it would still not be a being. — Wayfarer
this machine is not a being in the sense that a human is a being....I still argue that this machine does have a state of being and a concept of self that it experiences.... — Theory
I guess the question is, could there possibly be artificial "I"s? — Jamalrob
When you say 'in the sense that a human is a being' - what other sense is there? Pick up a dictionary or an encyclopedia, and look up 'being' as a noun - how many instances are there? How many things are called 'beings'? As far as I know, the only things commonly referred to by that term, are humans.
None of that is to say that Deepmind is not amazing technology with many applications etc etc. But it is to call into question the sense in which it is actually a mind. — Wayfarer
My first instinct is to say that there is no barrier in principle to the creation of artificial persons, or agentive rational beings — jamalrob
My first instinct is to say that there is no barrier in principle to the creation of artificial persons, or agentive rational beings, or what have you (such vagueness precludes me from coming up with a solution, I feel). Do you think there is such a barrier? — Jamalrob
So if you were to create an actual artificial intelligence, how would you create the unconscious? How would you write a specification for it? 'The conscious mind' would be a big enough challenge, I suspect 'the unconscious' would be orders of magnitude larger, and impossible to specify, for obvious reasons, if you think about it. — Wayfarer
And as regards 'creating a mind', think about the role of the unconscious in the operations of mind. The unconscious contains all manner of influences, traits, abilities, and so on - racial, linguistic and cultural heritage, autonomic features, the archetypes, heaven knows what else: — Wayfarer
So if you were to create an actual artificial intelligence, how would you create the unconscious? How would you write a specification for it? 'The conscious mind' would be a big enough challenge, I suspect 'the unconscious' would be orders of magnitude larger, and impossible to specify, for obvious reasons, if you think about it. — Wayfarer
So, of course, we couldn't do that - we would have to endow a network with characteristics, and let it evolve over time. Build up karma, so to speak, or gain an identity and in so doing, the equivalent of a culture, an unconscious, archetypes, and the rest. But how would you know what it was you were creating? And would it be 'a being', or would it still be billions of switches? — Wayfarer
It sounds strained to talk of the meaning of 'I am', because (obviously), what "I am" is never present to awareness, it is what it is that things are present to. It is 'first person', it is that to which everything is disclosed, for that reason not amongst the objects of consciousness. And that again is an ontological distinction. — Wayfarer
A.I. is approaching a level where it can learn exponentially... — MTheory
Watson is distinctly different than deepmind they use different techniques...I believe deepmind is more flexible in that it can learn to do different tasks from scratch where as watson is programed to perform a specific task.I believe that IBM is working on AI projects which will make Deep Mind look rather insignificant. In fact, some argue that Watson already makes Deep Mind look insignificant. — Metaphysician Undercover
I am seeking to explore the philosophical implications of what it means if general purpose A.I. can learn to solve any problem a human might solve. — m-theory
It is no surprise, then, that the contextual coherence of things — how things hold together in fluid, immediately accessible, interpenetrating patterns of significance rather than in precisely framed logical relationships — remains to this day the defining problem for AI.
It is the problem of meaning. — Wayfarer
I apologise if I didn't make my position abundantly clear: an Artificial General Intelligence would *be* a person. It could certainly be endowed with capabilities far beyond humans, but whether one of those is problem solving or "growth of knowledge" can't be understood until we humans solve that puzzle ourselves. — tom
If you don't mind could you elaborate on this.Take for the sake of argument that knowledge grows via the Popperian paradigm (if you'll pardon the phrase). i.e. Popper's epistemology is correct. There are two parts to this: the Logic of Scientific Discovery, and the mysterious "conjecture". I'm not convinced that the Logic can be performed by a non self-aware entity, if it could, then why has no one programmed it? — tom
I see it a bit differently.AlphaGo does something very interesting - it conjectures. However, the conjectures it makes are nothing more than random trials. — tom
What does 'form meaning' mean? — Wayfarer
The nature of meaning is far from obvious. — Wayfarer
I don't believe computers understand anything, they process information according to algorithms and provide outputs. — Wayfarer
Well in the formal sense meaning is just a knowing a problem and knowing the solution to that problem.
And formally knowing is just a set of data. — Theory
You know computers can't understand or know meaning...but at the same time meaning and understanding is mysterious.
That is a bit of a contradiction don't you think? — Theory
And for programmable machines, we can see that there is a designed in divorce between the states of information and the material processes sustaining those states. — apokrisis
And as I have pointed out we would have to build in this selfhood relation from the top down. Whereas in life it exists from the bottom up, starting with molecular machines at the quasi classical nanoscale of the biophysics of cells. So computers are always going against nature in trying to recreate nature in this sense. — apokrisis
No, that's not a contradiction at all. As far as I am concerned it is a statement of fact.
Over and out on this thread, thanks. — Wayfarer
You toss these phrases off, as if it is all settled, as if understanding the issues is really simple. But it really is not, all you're communicating is the fact that you're skating over the surface. 'The nature of knowledge' is the subject of the discipline of epistemology, and it's very difficult subject. — Wayfarer
Whether computers are conscious or not, is also a really difficult and unresolved question. — Wayfarer
I guess I will have to take your word for it.No, that's not a contradiction at all. As far as I am concerned it is a statement of fact. — Wayfarer
Over and out on this thread, thanks. — Wayfarer
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