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No: induction provides weak evidence
Position
1
#4059
Passing the Turing test provides—at best—very weak evidence of intelligence.
See, for example, Jason L. Hutchens "
How to Pass the Turing Test by Cheating
", April 23 1996.
CONTEXT
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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
▲
Can inductive evidence determine this? »
Can inductive evidence determine this?
Can inductive evidence determine this?☜Is the test—as a source of inductive evidence—a legitimate test of intelligence? Such evidence may be weak or strong, but never deductively certain. A claim that a system thinks based on its passing the test is open to further evidence and revision.☜FFB597
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No: induction provides weak evidence
No: induction provides weak evidence☜Passing the Turing test provides—at best—very weak evidence of intelligence.☜59C6EF
●
Evidence open to different explanation »
Evidence open to different explanation
Evidence open to different explanation☜The inductive evidence interpretation assumes that passing the test should be explained in terms of thinking, but a mechanical interpretation—in terms of the computers structure, program and physical environment—offers a better explanation.☜98CE71
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Entered by:-
David Price
NodeID:
#4059
Node type:
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Entry date (GMT):
1/9/2008 4:09:00 PM
Last edit date (GMT):
1/9/2008 4:25:00 PM
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