Gary’s,

 

Biosemiotics has made us well aware of the intimate connection between life and 
semiosis.

 

What if we insert ‘mind’ instead of life? 

 

Best,

Auke

 

 

Van: Gary Richmond [mailto:gary.richm...@gmail.com] 
Verzonden: zaterdag 17 juni 2017 17:29
Aan: Peirce-L <peirce-l@list.iupui.edu>
Onderwerp: Re: [PEIRCE-L] RE: AI

 

Gary F,

 

Oh, I didn't take your expression "DNA chauvinism" all that seriously, at least 
as an accusation. But thanks for your thoughfulness in this message.

 

You wrote: "Anyway, the point was to name a chemical substance which is a 
material component of life forms as we know them on Earth, and not a material 
component of an AI."

 

I suppose at this point I'd merely emphasize a point I made in passing 
earllier: that although I can imagine life forming from some other arising from 
"a chemical substance which is a material component of life forms as we know 
them on Earth." say, carbon, on some other planet in the cosmos, that I cannot 
imagine life forming from an AI on Earth so that that remains for me science 
fiction and not science.

 

Best,

 

Gary R

 




  
<https://d22r54gnmuhwmk.cloudfront.net/photos/0/ia/il/nnIAIlpwAddaFAz-44x44-cropped.jpg>
 

 

Gary Richmond

Philosophy and Critical Thinking

Communication Studies

LaGuardia College of the City University of New York

C 745

718 482-5690

 

On Sat, Jun 17, 2017 at 8:17 AM, <g...@gnusystems.ca 
<mailto:g...@gnusystems.ca> > wrote:

Gary R,

 

Sorry, instead of “DNA chauvinism” I should have used a term that Peirce would 
have used, like “protoplasm.” — But then he wouldn’t have used “chauvinism” 
either. My bad. Anyway, the point was to name a chemical substance which is a 
material component of life forms as we know them on Earth, and not a material 
component of an AI. So I was reiterating the idea that the definition of a 
“scientific intelligence” should be formal or functional and not material, in 
order to preserve the generality of Peircean semiotics. I didn’t mean to accuse 
you of anything.

 

Gary f.

 

From: Gary Richmond [mailto:gary.richm...@gmail.com 
<mailto:gary.richm...@gmail.com> ] 
Sent: 16-Jun-17 18:35
To: Peirce-L <peirce-l@list.iupui.edu <mailto:peirce-l@list.iupui.edu> >
Subject: Re: [PEIRCE-L] RE: AI

 

Gary F,

 

You wrote: 

 

Biosemiotics has made us well aware of the intimate connection between life and 
semiosis. I’m just trying to take the next step of generalization by arguing 
against what I call DNA chauvinism, and taking it to be an open question 
whether electronic systems capable of learning can eventually develop 
intentions and arguments (and lives) of their own. To my knowledge, the 
evidence is not yet there to decide the question one way or the other.

 

I am certainly convinced "of the intimate connection between life and 
semiosis." But as to the rest, especially whether electronic systems can 
develop  "lives of their own," well I have my sincere and serious doubts. So, 
let's at least agree that "the evidence is not yet there to decide the question 
one way or the other." But "DNA chauvinism"?--hm, I'm not even exactly sure 
what that means, but apparently I've been accused of it. I guess I'm OK with 
that.

 

Best,

 

Gary R

 




  
<https://d22r54gnmuhwmk.cloudfront.net/photos/0/ia/il/nnIAIlpwAddaFAz-44x44-cropped.jpg>
 

 

Gary Richmond

Philosophy and Critical Thinking

Communication Studies

LaGuardia College of the City University of New York

C 745

718 482-5690 <tel:(718)%20482-5690> 

 

On Fri, Jun 16, 2017 at 5:42 PM, <g...@gnusystems.ca 
<mailto:g...@gnusystems.ca> > wrote:

Gary,

 

For me at least, the connection to Peirce is his anti-psychologism, which 
amounts to his generalization of semiotics beyond the human use of signs. As he 
says in EP2:309,

“Logic, for me, is the study of the essential conditions to which signs must 
conform in order to function as such. How the constitution of the human mind 
may compel men to think is not the question.”

 

Biosemiotics has made us well aware of the intimate connection between life and 
semiosis. I’m just trying to take the next step of generalization by arguing 
against what I call DNA chauvinism, and taking it to be an open question 
whether electronic systems capable of learning can eventually develop 
intentions and arguments (and lives) of their own. To my knowledge, the 
evidence is not yet there to decide the question one way or the other.

 

Gary f.

 

From: Gary Richmond [mailto:gary.richm...@gmail.com 
<mailto:gary.richm...@gmail.com> ] 
Sent: 16-Jun-17 14:08

Gary F, list,

 

Very interesting and impressive list and discussion of what AI is doing in 
combatting terrorism. Interestingly, after that discussion the article 
continues: 

Human Expertise

AI can’t catch everything. Figuring out what supports terrorism and what does 
not isn’t always straightforward, and algorithms are not yet as good as people 
when it comes to understanding this kind of context. A photo of an armed man 
waving an ISIS flag might be propaganda or recruiting material, but could be an 
image in a news story. Some of the most effective criticisms of brutal groups 
like ISIS utilize the group’s own propaganda against it. To understand more 
nuanced cases, we need human expertise.

The paragraph above suggests that "algorithms are not yet as good as people" 
when ti comes to nuance and understanding context. Will they ever be?  No doubt 
they'll improve considerably in time.

 

In my opinion, AI is best seen as a human tool which like many tools can be 
used for good or evil. But we're getting pretty far from anything 
Peirce-related, so I'll leave it at that.

 

Best,

 

Gary R

 



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