The Reverse Turing Test
Given our natural tendency to anthropmorphize machines, one might ask, in a kind of Reverse Turing Test, whether a machine can avoid being treated as intelligent—i.e. "Can a machine interacting with a human being avoid being anthropomorphized?"
Joseph Rychlak, 1991.

Rychlak points to the ELIZA Effect (Map 1, Box 106) as an example of humans being fooled into thinking that a machine that engages in conversation can think.
Immediately related elementsHow this works
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Artificial Intelligence »Artificial Intelligence
Can the Turing Test determine this? [2]  »Can the Turing Test determine this? [2] 
No: passing the Test is not decisive »No: passing the Test is not decisive
The Anthropomorphizing Objection »The Anthropomorphizing Objection
The Reverse Turing Test
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