Hi all,

I have been thinking a bit about the nature of conversations on this list.

It seems to me there are two types of conversations here:

1)
Discussions of how to design or engineer AGI systems, using current
computers, according to designs that can feasibly be implemented by
moderately-sized groups of people

2)
Discussions about whether the above is even possible -- or whether it is
impossible because of weird physics, or poorly-defined special
characteristics of human creativity, or the so-called "complex systems
problem", or because AGI intrinsically requires billions of people and
quadrillions of dollars, or whatever

Personally I am pretty bored with all the conversations of type 2.

It's not that I consider them useless discussions in a grand sense ...
certainly, they are valid topics for intellectual inquiry.

But, to do anything real, you have to make **some** decisions about what
approach to take, and I've decided long ago to take an approach of trying to
engineer an AGI system.

Now, if someone had a solid argument as to why engineering an AGI system is
impossible, that would be important.  But that never seems to be the case.
Rather, what we hear are long discussions of peoples' intuitions and
opinions in this regard.  People are welcome to their own intuitions and
opinions, but I get really bored scanning through all these intuitions about
why AGI is impossible.

One possibility would be to more narrowly focus this list, specifically on
**how to make AGI work**.

If this re-focusing were done, then philosophical arguments about the
impossibility of engineering AGI in the near term would be judged **off
topic** by definition of the list purpose.

Potentially, there could be another list, something like "agi-philosophy",
devoted to philosophical and weird-physics and other discussions about
whether AGI is possible or not.  I am not sure whether I feel like running
that other list ... and even if I ran it, I might not bother to read it very
often.  I'm interested in new, substantial ideas related to the in-principle
possibility of AGI, but not interested at all in endless philosophical
arguments over various peoples' intuitions in this regard.

One fear I have is that people who are actually interested in building AGI,
could be scared away from this list because of the large volume of anti-AGI
philosophical discussion.   Which, I add, almost never has any new content,
and mainly just repeats well-known anti-AGI arguments (Penrose-like physics
arguments ... "mind is too complex to engineer, it has to be evolved" ...
"no one has built an AGI yet therefore it will never be done" ... etc.)

What are your thoughts on this?

-- Ben




On Wed, Oct 15, 2008 at 10:49 AM, Jim Bromer <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

> On Wed, Oct 15, 2008 at 10:14 AM, Ben Goertzel <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> >
> > Actually, I think COMP=false is a perfectly valid subject for discussion
> on
> > this list.
> >
> > However, I don't think discussions of the form "I have all the answers,
> but
> > they're top-secret and I'm not telling you, hahaha" are particularly
> useful.
> >
> > So, speaking as a list participant, it seems to me this thread has
> probably
> > met its natural end, with this reference to proprietary weird-physics IP.
> >
> > However, speaking as list moderator, I don't find this thread so
> off-topic
> > or unpleasant as to formally kill the thread.
> >
> > -- Ben
>
> If someone doesn't want to get into a conversation with Colin about
> whatever it is that he is saying, then they should just exercise some
> self-control and refrain from doing so.
>
> I think Colin's ideas are pretty far out there. But that does not mean
> that he has never said anything that might be useful.
>
> My offbeat topic, that I believe that the Lord may have given me some
> direction about a novel approach to logical satisfiability that I am
> working on, but I don't want to discuss the details about the
> algorithms until I have gotten a chance to see if they work or not,
> was never intended to be a discussion about the theory itself.  I
> wanted to have a discussion about whether or not a good SAT solution
> would have a significant influence on AGI, and whether or not the
> unlikely discovery of an unexpected breakthrough on SAT would serve as
> rational evidence in support of the theory that the Lord helped me
> with the theory.
>
> Although I am skeptical about what I think Colin is claiming, there is
> an obvious parallel between his case and mine.  There are relevant
> issues which he wants to discuss even though his central claim seems
> to private, and these relevant issues may be interesting.
>
> Colin's unusual reference to some solid path which cannot be yet
> discussed is annoying partly because it so obviously unfounded.  If he
> had the proof (or a method), then why isn't he writing it up (or
> working it out).  A similar argument was made against me by the way,
> but the difference was that I never said that I had the proof or
> method.  (I did say that you should get used to a polynomial time
> solution to SAT but I never said that I had a working algorithm.)
>
> My point is that even though people may annoy you with what seems like
> unsubstantiated claims, that does not disqualify everything they have
> said. That rule could so easily be applied to anyone who posts on that
> list.
>
> Jim Bromer
>
>
> -------------------------------------------
> agi
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-- 
Ben Goertzel, PhD
CEO, Novamente LLC and Biomind LLC
Director of Research, SIAI
[EMAIL PROTECTED]

"Nothing will ever be attempted if all possible objections must be first
overcome "  - Dr Samuel Johnson



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