Author: Bruce Moreland
Date: 08:43:36 03/14/01
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On March 14, 2001 at 10:05:05, Fernando Villegas wrote: >Hi Bruce: >I wonder if your statement about generalizing as the clue of the issue is enough >precise for the task of approaching it. I am not sure a program that can handle >specific positions in terms of a general kind of criteria is "generalizing". It >sounds to me more as categorizing. Categorizing supposes that a category >previously exist and that there are certain rules to allocate cases inside each >of the boxes of the category. So it is, in a dregree, a mechanical task. >Generalizing supposes, IMHO, not only that, but to create the category, to >discover something common that was not aparent before. So a really intelligent >act not only order the world, but order it in some different way. Of course not >all days we can do that, but then maybe it could be said that no all days >intelligent people behave as such. A great deal of our behaviours is just some >kind of rutine, even if it is high level rutine. What I would accept for >programs is that they use some kind of rutinized intelligence, pre-cooked >intelligence. But, again, all this supposes a certain criteria about >intelligence that maybe is mine but not yours. This is a very open case for >debate. >Cheers >Fernando Programs take a position and produce a move. If the position is something unexpected by the programmer, in many cases they still do fine. A human exhibits intelligence when he or see meets a new situation and makes a joke about it. Human intelligence is much more generalized and much more complex, but this isn't about whether the programs are human, it's about whether they exhibit intelligent behavior. Playing chess is good enough for a program. So what if they can't brush their teeth or have a social life? A lot of chess players can't either. bruce
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