On Sun, Dec 21, 2014 at 2:45 PM,  <[email protected]> wrote:

> Yesterday you said you had to conclude if the test detected consciousness
> well it must also detect intelligence.


That's not what I said, you've got it backward. Something can be conscious
but not intelligent, but if it's intelligent then it's conscious.
Consciousness is easy but intelligence

> The Turing Test does not detect either one


I am certain you have met people in your life that you wouldn't hesitate to
call brilliant, and you've met people you'd call complete morons, but if
you don't examine the same thing that the Turing Test does, behavior, how
do you make that determination?

 John K Clark

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