Linguistic evidence sufficient for good inductive inference
An inductive inference that a machine can think can be made by considering only linguistic behaviour; even if this inference needs to be revised later in the light of further evidence. Inferences made without full evidence are common in science.
Otherwise:

"scientists would never gather enough evidence for any hypothesis."

James Moor, 1987, p.1128.

Note: Supported by the "Inductive Interpretation" Box 108.
Immediately related elementsHow this works
-
Artificial Intelligence Â»Artificial Intelligence
Can the Turing Test determine this? [2]  Â»Can the Turing Test determine this? [2] 
No: passing the Test is not decisive Â»No: passing the Test is not decisive
The Turing test is too narrow Â»The Turing test is too narrow
Linguistic evidence sufficient for good inductive inference
James Moor Â»James Moor
+Kommentare (0)
+Verweise (0)
+About