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Computers can't make mistakes
VoorArgument
1
#211
Computers differ from humans in that humans can make mistakes, whereas computers can't. Computers are easily unmasked in the Turing Test because humans frequently make mistakes in complex arithmetic whereas computers never do.
91
Argument anticipated by Alan Turing (1950).
Note
: for more on the Turing Test see Map 2.
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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
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Can computers think? [1] »
Can computers think? [1]
Can computers think? [1]☜Can a computational system possess all important elements of human thinking or understanding? ☜FFB597
▲
No: computers are inherently disabled »
No: computers are inherently disabled
No: computers are inherently disabled ☜Machines can never do X, where X is any variety of abilities that are regarded as distinctly human—e.g. being friendly, having a sense of humour, making mistakes, or thinking about oneself. ☜59C6EF
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Computers can't make mistakes
Computers can't make mistakes☜Computers differ from humans in that humans can make mistakes, whereas computers cant. Computers are easily unmasked in the Turing Test because humans frequently make mistakes in complex arithmetic whereas computers never do.☜98CE71
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Computers can make certain types of mistakes »
Computers can make certain types of mistakes
Computers can make certain types of mistakes☜Machines cant commit errors of functioning—arising from physical construction—if they are properly constructed. But can commit errors of conclusion—arising from the reasoning process—eg by making faulty inferences based on inadequate information.☜EF597B
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Teach them to fail »
Teach them to fail
Teach them to fail☜One can always teach the program to fail. Have it confuse addition and multiplication facts for each other. Or make it a lazy computer that doesnt want to do any math that a 3rd grader couldnt do. I find thatNo I dont want to bother. is a very human response to just about anything.☜EF597B
►
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?☜FFFACD
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Gemaakt door:
David Price
NodeID:
#211
Node type:
SupportiveArgument
Gemaakt op (GMT):
6/6/2006 9:02:00 PM
Laatste bewerking (GMT):
11/18/2007 4:36:00 PM
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