No: but Neo-Turing test is adequate
The neo-Turing test interprets the Turing test as providing an overt, measurable behavioural and operational definition of thinking—and refines the test to avoid classical problems associated with behaviourism and other related criticisms.
The neo-Turing Test is conceived as a strengthened version of behaviourism that avoids classical problems assocated with behavioursism as well as problems associated with the original Turing Test. Rather than rely on human judges, it merely requires:
 
"a sensible sequence of verbal responses to verbal stimuli".

The test also avoids problems associated with dipositional analysis by substituting 'capacities' for dispositions.

"Intelligence (or more accurately conversational intelligence) is the capacity to produce a sensible sequence of verbal responses to a sequence of verbal stimuli, whatever they may be".

The neo-Turing test is a 'straw man' proposed by Ned Block (1981) to allow him to argue that even a beefed-up version of behaviourism will fall prey to psychologism.

Argument anticipated by Ned Block, 1981, p.18.
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: but Neo-Turing test is adequate
Neo-Turing Test fails to improve on behaviourism »Neo-Turing Test fails to improve on behaviourism
The Psychologism Objection »The Psychologism Objection
Operational interpretation is too rigid »Operational interpretation is too rigid
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