Ben:Every idea you have ever heard of is an example of a concept formed via 
algorithmic processes.  Examples: motorcycle, number, chinchilla, Dragon and 
Phoenix Lucky Together, nun, none, the Orgiastic Chiliasm of the Anabaptists, 
trolls, Internet trolls, Mike Tintner

This is a would-be  scientific hypothesis. It is not a fact.  

No one has ever spied an “algorithmic process” at the heart of humans forming 
concepts. No one even knows how information is laid down in the brain, period.

In science, hypotheses, to be treated seriously, have to produce 
evidence/examples.

You have none. Neither has anyone else here. 

IN technology, too you have to produce some evidence, some “proof of concept,” 
however limited and informal for your project.

You have none. Neither has anyone else here. 

That is simply appalling and inexcusable practice for any professional 
scientist/technologist – esp when this is a central question for AGI and AGI is 
so stuck.


From: Ben Goertzel 
Sent: Thursday, October 11, 2012 3:52 PM
To: AGI 
Subject: Re: [agi] Behold your saviour, Ben

Mike T --

Every idea you have ever heard of is an example of a concept formed via 
algorithmic processes.  Examples: motorcycle, number, chinchilla, Dragon and 
Phoenix Lucky Together, nun, none, the Orgiastic Chiliasm of the Anabaptists, 
trolls, Internet trolls, Mike Tintner 

One conceptual problem you're having is a failure to grok that the lower-level 
elements combined to form ordinary human ideas are very small ones, so that 
your conscious mind cannot perceive the ways that its concepts are formed of 
arrangements of very small, unconscious elements

Then you absurdly ask me to give a detailed example showing how, say, 
"motorcycle" is formed from zillions of teeny little mental patterns abstracted 
from perceptions and actions....  The reason we can't give detailed examples 
for you, are that cognitively natural, consciously understood concepts live 
near the top of a massive deep hierarchy, and are huge complex combinations of 
the teensy underlying elements.

-- Ben G





On Thu, Oct 11, 2012 at 9:14 PM, Mike Tintner <[email protected]> wrote:

  But, Ben, you still have not produced one example. ONE FUCKING EXAMPLE.

  I can though – I agree – produce a more precisely reasoned explanation of 
algorithms’ impotence.

  An algorithm or recipe is by definition **a set of rules which prescribe how 
to combine a given set of elements.**

  They only prescribe those given elements. There is no facility within an 
algorithm or recipe for prescribing new elements.[Or you must demonstrate such 
a facility].
  You cannot have an algorithm which says: “take one Lego brick and another 
Lego brick – oh and something else which I haven’t thought of – but you’ll 
think of something...”
  Also – they cannot prescribe GENERAL elements. (Kinda important for A General 
I). Or GENERAL structures.  
  For example, there is no algorithm for (building) “HOUSES.”  There are only 
algorithms for building one or more specific kinds of house – Lego houses.
  Ditto there is no algorithm for combining “BUILDING BLOCKS” -  any 
conceivable kind of building part – just, say, Lego bricks.
  You don’t and can’t have an algorithm which says:
  “take one building block [of any kind] and another building block [of any 
kind] and put them on top of each other like this.”
  That’s a self-evident nonsense. The rules or principles of combining 
particular kinds of  building blocks do not apply to other kinds – those of 
bricks don’t apply to rocks or lumps of clay.
  There is no algorithm similarly for (cooking) “A MEAL”  or “A STEW” or “A 
SMORGASBORD.” Just a particular processed dish.
  There is no algorithm for combining “FOOD INGREDIENTS” – any conceivable kind 
of food ingredient.
  There is no algorithm which says:
  “take one food ingredient [of any kind] and another food ingredient [of any 
kind] and heat them together to 60deg C. and then add one sauce [of any kind]”.
  That’s an obvious nonsense. Food ingredients are extremely diverse and do not 
combine in universal ways.
  ONE FUCKING EXAMPLE.
  P.S.  General – conceptual – thinking, such as my examples above, is the 
basis of creative thinking – and the basis of all human activities. We do say 
all the time: “put together a menu with something healthy as a starter, and a 
substantial meat dish in the middle, and a really great over-the-top sweet at 
the end.”
  “General prescriptions” are the foundation of human action – but they are 
demonstrably non-algorithmic – and indeed anti-algorithmic. The opposite of 
specialised thinking.
  This is why algorithms don’t and can’t handle concepts, period.



  From: Ben Goertzel 
  Sent: Thursday, October 11, 2012 1:46 PM
  To: AGI 
  Subject: Re: [agi] Behold your saviour, Ben


  But Mike T, 

  You have no argument in favor of your assertion that: complex algorithmic 
processes, controlling an agent interacting with a complex enviroment, cannot 
produce results that will be interpreted by humans or other intelligent agents 
as fundamentally creative and novel.

  You simply repeat this assertion as if others should find it as intuitively 
obvious as you do ;p

  I agree that simple algorithmic processes, which can be written down in a few 
lines of text, cannot give rise to results that humans will perceive as 
fundamentally creative and novel -- except perhaps occasionally by chance, or 
after extraordinarily large run-times on extraordinarily powerful computers.

  But this limitation of simple algorithmic processes says nothing about 
complex ones.

  You don't **feel**, intuitively, like the apparently creative, novel things 
humans have created could have come out of complex algorithmic processes 
(controlling agents interacting with environments).  But you don't have  the 
ability to see the human unconscious in detail, nor do you have technical 
understanding of complex algorithmic processes. 

  As an aside, note that an algorithmic process interacting with an 
environment, can in principle use its manipulation of the environment to modify 
the hardware on which it runs.  This means its behavior in the long run may 
become quite unpredictable, to someone who knows only about the algorithmic 
process and doesn't have full knowledge of the environment.  

  -- Ben



  On Thu, Oct 11, 2012 at 8:05 PM, Mike Tintner <[email protected]> 
wrote:

    I’ve already covered it. GA’s do not produce *new elements*. They permutate 
a very limited set of given elements. So a GA can produce variations on an 
electric circuit. But that’s it. That’s all it can do. Electric circuits. It 
can’t produce a new system of water piping. Or oil piping. Or aquifers. Or an 
irrigation system.

    And even then, you need the guidance of a human programmer.

    Creativity is *new elements* m – endless generativity.  

    From: Mike Archbold 
    Sent: Thursday, October 11, 2012 12:06 PM
    To: AGI 
    Subject: Re: [agi] Behold your saviour, Ben




    On Thu, Oct 11, 2012 at 3:54 AM, Mike Tintner <[email protected]> 
wrote:

      PRODUCE ONE EXAMPLE of a creative algorithm. Or a creative recipe. One 
single algorithm that has produced one new element.


    I'd say the whole of evolutionary computing which subsumes all of genetic 
algorithms, genetic programming, evolution strategies, evolutionary programming 
etc fits that general goal.  See a book called Intro to Evolutionary Computing 
by Eiben Smith.  Optimisation, modelling, simulation are the results.  Now you 
are going to counter "well, it's still narrow and preprogrammed."  But then 
that gets back to the problem of moving the goal posts around in AI.  It's 
creative given the present state of AI, does it scale up to your expectations?  
Probably not at this point.  But, it's creative to an extent. I'm not here to 
sell you on AI, though, just to give you an example (one fucking example that 
is).


          AGI | Archives  | Modify Your Subscription   

          AGI | Archives  | Modify Your Subscription  





  -- 
  Ben Goertzel, PhD
  http://goertzel.org

  "My humanity is a constant self-overcoming" -- Friedrich Nietzsche


        AGI | Archives  | Modify Your Subscription   

        AGI | Archives  | Modify Your Subscription  





-- 
Ben Goertzel, PhD
http://goertzel.org

"My humanity is a constant self-overcoming" -- Friedrich Nietzsche


      AGI | Archives  | Modify Your Subscription   



-------------------------------------------
AGI
Archives: https://www.listbox.com/member/archive/303/=now
RSS Feed: https://www.listbox.com/member/archive/rss/303/21088071-c97d2393
Modify Your Subscription: 
https://www.listbox.com/member/?member_id=21088071&id_secret=21088071-2484a968
Powered by Listbox: http://www.listbox.com

Reply via email to