A worm. Intelligent enough to bring many different kinds of objects to fill its
burrow - and drag them in, in many different ways.
Or maybe a slime mould. Can make its way through a maze.
Or what the heck - a paramoecium, can alter its path to seek food.
Matthias:
Chess is a typical example of a very hard problem where human level
intelligence
could be outperformed by typical AI programs when they have enough computing
power available.
But a chess program is no AGI program because it is restricted to a very
narrow well defined problem and environment.
On the other hand, if there is a program which has human level intelligence,
then we would say that this program is an AGI program.
Both examples are extreme examples and I wonder where people in this mailing
list see the necessary conditions of AGI.
On the one hand, one can try to describe this formally. But I would like to
find comparisons with animal like intelligence.
My question:
Which animal has the smallest level of intelligence which still would be
sufficient for a robot to be an AGI-robot?
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