2008/7/22 Mike Archbold <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
> It looks to me to be borrowed from Aristotle's ethics.  Back in my college
> days, I was trying to explain my project and the professor kept
> interrupting me to ask:  What does it do?  Tell me what it does.  I don't
> understand what your system does.  What he wanted was
> input-function-output.
> He didn't care about my fancy data structure or architecture goals, he
> just wanted to know what it DID.
>

I have come across this a lot. And while it is a very useful heuristic
for sniffing out bad ideas that don't do anything I also think it is
harmful to certain other endeavours. Imagine this hypothetical
conversation between Turing  and someone else (please ignore all
historical inaccuracies).

Sceptic: Hey Turing, how is it going. Hmm, what are you working on at
the moment?
Turing: A general purpose computing machine.
Sceptic: I'm not really sure what you mean by computing. Can you give
me an example of something it does?
Turing: Well you can use it calculate differential equations....
Sceptic: So it is a calculator, we already have machines that can do that.
Turing: Well it can also be a chess player.
Sceptic: Wait, what? How can something be a chess player and a calculator?
Turing: Well it isn't both at the same time, but you can reconfigure
it to do one then the other.
Sceptic: If you can reconfigure something, that means it doesn't
intrinsically do one or the other. So what does the machine do itself?
Turing: Well, err, nothing.

I think the quest for general intelligence (if we are to keep any
meaning in the word general), will have be hindered by trying to pin
down what candidate systems do, in the same way general computing
would be.

I think the requisite question in AGI to fill the gap formed by not
allowing this question, is, "How does it change?"

  Will


-------------------------------------------
agi
Archives: https://www.listbox.com/member/archive/303/=now
RSS Feed: https://www.listbox.com/member/archive/rss/303/
Modify Your Subscription: 
https://www.listbox.com/member/?member_id=8660244&id_secret=108809214-a0d121
Powered by Listbox: http://www.listbox.com

Reply via email to