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You can't fool Mother Nature
SupportiveArgument
1
#252
The test only measures the ability of a machine to trick judges, and can't test for the flexible adapations needed to interact in the natural world—where intelligence is best indicated by an ability to survive via co-ordinated perception and action.
In neglecting such abilities, the Turing Test biases us to think of intelligence in an intellectual way.
John Barresi, 1987.
CONTEXT
(Help)
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Artificial Intelligence »
Artificial Intelligence
Artificial Intelligence☜A collaboratively editable version of Robert Horns brilliant and pioneering debate map Can Computers Think?—exploring 50 years of philosophical argument about the possibility of computer thought.☜F1CEB7
▲
Can the Turing Test determine this? [2] »
Can the Turing Test determine this? [2]
Can the Turing Test determine this? [2] ☜Is the Turing Test—proposed by Alan Turing in 1950—an adequate test of thinking? Can it determine whether a machine can think? If a computer passess the test by persuading judges via a teletyped conversation that its human can it be said to think?☜FFB597
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No: passing the Test is not decisive »
No: passing the Test is not decisive
No: passing the Test is not decisive☜Even if a computer were to pass the Turing test, this would not justify the conclusion that it was thinking intelligently. ☜59C6EF
▲
The Turing test is too narrow »
The Turing test is too narrow
The Turing test is too narrow☜The Turing test is limited in scope. It narrowly focuses on one ability—the ability to engage in human conversation—and is therefore inadequate as a test of general intelligence.☜98CE71
■
You can't fool Mother Nature
You can't fool Mother Nature☜The test only measures the ability of a machine to trick judges, and cant test for the flexible adapations needed to interact in the natural world—where intelligence is best indicated by an ability to survive via co-ordinated perception and action.☜98CE71
●
The Cyberiad Test »
The Cyberiad Test
The Cyberiad Test☜A race of machines (cybers) is judged intelligent if they can do whatever humans can do in a natural environment (eg replace humans in social roles, perpetuate their species for as long as the human species could & maintain an evolving language.☜98CE71
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Entered by:-
David Price
NodeID:
#252
Node type:
SupportiveArgument
Entry date (GMT):
6/13/2006 10:27:00 PM
Last edit date (GMT):
12/9/2007 10:50:00 PM
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