I just wish Alexa could follow what I say and do what I ask more than half the time. Maybe AI is making some time in big labs, but practical, interactive AI is a long way from where I'm sitting now. — Pantagruel
Artificial intelligence is not there yet, agreed, but they are already reaching the level of artificial dumbness. — Olivier5
We teach the AI what is the content of an image as we do with our children — Raul
Artificial intelligence is not there yet, agreed, but they are already reaching the level of artificial dumbness. — Olivier5
This kind of misunderstanding is very prevalent and is a real hindrance to understanding both brains and AI — fishfry
We don't even know how brains work — fishfry
There is something fundamentally similar between AI and how our brain works. — Raul
What is missing? What we,humans, cannot accept or imagine that this artificial intelligence can do?
Isn't it that this transhuman, artificial epistemology machine is going to redefine what we belief we are?
intuition, which I suspect cannot be directly programmed — tim wood
I think that steampunk fiction has emerged as the new offshoot where cyberpunk was going. So, perhaps we will see people with steam engines attached and clock parts, not just robots, walking the streets of our post apocalyptic future. — Jack Cummins
eugenics is already on it's way. — Jack Cummins
Think about an AI like a baby, capable of learning. We teach the AI what is the content of an image as we do with our children and the AI learns and remembers what we teach it the same way a baby does. We talk to the AI and the AI learns how to talk. — Raul
Computers could outstrip any philosopher or mathematician in marching mechanically through a programmed set of logical maneuvers, but this was only because philosophers and mathematicians — and the smallest child — were too smart for their intelligence to be invested in such maneuvers. The same goes for a dog. “It is much easier,” observed AI pioneer Terry Winograd, “to write a program to carry out abstruse formal operations than to encode the common sense of a dog.”
A dog knows, through its own sort of common sense, that it cannot leap over a house in order to reach its master. It presumably knows this as the directly given meaning of houses and leaps — a meaning it experiences all the way down into its muscles and bones. As for you and me, we know, perhaps without ever having thought about it, that a person cannot be in two places at once. We know (to extract a few examples from the literature of cognitive science) that there is no football stadium on the train to Seattle, that giraffes do not wear hats and underwear, and that a book can aid us in propping up a slide projector but a sirloin steak probably isn’t appropriate. — Steve Talbott
and not that much the physical substrate. — Raul
I have worked in AI and use it every day, and this is not an accurate depiction of AI. — Wayfarer
A dog knows, through its own sort of common sense, that it cannot leap over a house in order to reach its master. It presumably knows this as the directly given meaning of houses and leaps — Steve Talbott
The substrate likely constrains what the system can and cannot do. — Olivier5
Not true as I understand it. We do not weight our childrens' brain nodes and backtest the weights repeatedly until we get good results. Current approaches to ML aren't anything like how brains work. We don't even know how brains work. This kind of misunderstanding is very prevalent and is a real hindrance to understanding both brains and AI. — fishfry
Yes, but as noted probably not directly programmable/codable. I suspect it's not intuition at all, but a set of heuristics run through very fast. Do people do the same thing? I do not know.Try to define intuition and you will see it is overestimated. Ask this question to Ke Jie, the champion of Go that lost against AlphaGo AI. Many asian people could tell you AI was having intuitions and imagination to win against Ke Jie... — Raul
Do people do the same thing? I do not know. — tim wood
But if you have examples of new qualities, new capabilities I would be very interested. Quantum computers are still hard to grasp for me. — Raul
You can simulate in traditional computers probabilities and randomness that can simulate what you say, cases where the door is neither open or close. — Raul
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