DrEvil » Fri Dec 05, 2014 6:06 pm wrote:Fair point on the "passing as human" part, no need to be as complex as us to do that, but what if we build something that really is as complex as a human brain, and that construct can pass as a human? Is it still just a fancy simulation?
Thanks for taking it in the spirit it was intended; it was just short since I didn't have much to add to it.
The Turing Test standard has always baffled me, since even an
ELIZA level chat bot is perfectly sufficient to keep your grandma busy for 20 minutes. (Or, legend has it, RAND executives angry for a few hours.)
People panicked when they first saw movies; another simple hack with profound consequences -- and a lot to say about how low-res our perception of the Universe is, I suppose.
So my point was more about what a crudely shallow approximation Turing-style finish lines are, compared to the completely intractable problem of
actually describing and accounting for our own experience as organisms.That said: although I am an inveterate skeptic on the subject of AI as consciousness, I also expect to see some absolutely fucking amazing stuff from outfits like DeepMind in the next 10 years. (More especially from the outfits we don't know about because they aren't looking for funding, just quietly recruiting for talent.) I do expect to see amazingly accurate models of the human brain -- and I also expect that those models will force us to admit the brain isn't answering all the questions we expected it to. (Again, just like the genetic determinism ideology was undone by their own success with the
HGP.)