I was curious about the film you were talking about, "Mind in the
Machine", and Googled it, coming across several things including its
origin and a simple statement by an Australian journalist (quoted below)
of Turing's idea of the test one would apply to measure success in
reproducing intelligence. 

I read the statement as saying if you're able to imitate something by
some other means (say behaviors of people by computers), in a way that
an observer doesn't notice the discrepancy, you've made the real thing.
I expect that's not quite accurate, and the current thinking has
evolved.   Can anyone say where the concept is headed?   



Phil


http://www.abc.net.au/science/slab/allen/story.htm

"The theoretical basis of artificial intelligence goes back to the
British mathematician, Alan Turing. In 1950, he proposed a test by which
he claimed we could determine whether or not a machine could think. The
Turing test, as it has become known, is quite simple. If a computer can
perform in such a way that an expert cannot distinguish its performance
from that of a human who has a certain cognitive ability - say the
ability to do subtraction - then the computer has the same ability as
the human. If we could design programs which simulate human cognition in
such a way as to pass the Turing test, then those programs would no
longer be models of the mind, they would literally be minds, in the same
sense that the human mind is a mind. "

"Turing was probably being deliberately provocative in proposing this
test. In 1950 the idea that a machine could beat a human in any skill
that required intelligence seemed complete fancy. Even so, the Turing
test became a challenge that would motivate the field of AI research for
decades. "


Phil Henshaw                       ¸¸¸¸.·´ ¯ `·.¸¸¸¸
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
680 Ft. Washington Ave 
NY NY 10040                       
tel: 212-795-4844                 
e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]          
explorations: www.synapse9.com    




============================================================
FRIAM Applied Complexity Group listserv
Meets Fridays 9a-11:30 at cafe at St. John's College
lectures, archives, unsubscribe, maps at http://www.friam.org

Reply via email to