Thank you. I have drawn a couple of conclusions about this, but am yet thinking it over. I will post something later today. — Michael Zwingli
Careful with the syllogism. Not that the computer, if it passes the test, is a person. It is that the computer is intelligent. — Caldwell
An unself-conscious and unaware organism that acts as if it's self-conscious and aware in a way that cannot be detected either physically or by observing its behavior is conscious and aware.
— T Clark — TheMadFool
The Turing Test
If a machine can fool a person into believing that it itself is a person, it must be considered as AI. — TheMadFool
In other words, AI is a person. — TheMadFool
The premise underlying the Turing Test is:
Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz's the principle of the identity of indiscernibles which, unlike its converse, the principle of the indiscernibility of identicals, is, last I checked, controversial.
The Turing Rule is the principle of the identity of indiscernibles and it's the premise on which the Turing Test is based. — TheMadFool
1. The indiscernibility of identicals: ∀x∀y[x=y→∀F(Fx↔Fy)]
For any x and y, if x is identical to y, then x and y have all the same properties.
2. The identity of indiscernibles: ∀x∀y[∀F(Fx↔Fy)→x=y]
For any x and y, if x and y have all the same properties, then x is identical to y. — TheMadFool
Identity is not an attribute. There is absolutely nothing it is "like" to conscious. Uniqueness is not a myth. — Gary M Washburn
Of course, these days, AI technicians know no end of ambition, and arrogance... — Gary M Washburn
Start with current top notch datamining capability and computer recognition, lets say every comment here on PF and on other Philosophical discussion site (still, quite finite amount of discussion threads), then add a great English language program, and realistically you could have a program that would fool people most of the time. — ssu
Maybe all that I have to say is nonsense... — Michael Zwingli
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