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lecture
lecture

... 1) The Soul: you must have a soul to think. -- God could make a thinking machine… 2) Originality: Computers must obey programs so they cannot do anything original. -- Programs could incorporate randomness 3) Humor: Thinking yields humor, machines don’t make ...
ijcai 2015 - Department of Intelligent Systems
ijcai 2015 - Department of Intelligent Systems

... •The test investigates whether people can detect if they are talking to machines or humans. •The experiment is based on Alan Turing's question-andanswer game Can Machines Think? •No computer has passed the test before under these conditions, it is reported. ...
AI*IA Workshop on Deep Understanding and Reasoning: A
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... interaction in the problem solving activity along the line of AI collaborators? – Is this the time to go “Beyond the Turing Test”? What about the risks for humanity related to these next-generation intelligent agents? I am not a fan of the Turing test, so I read this last question as: We need metric ...
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Quality – An Inherent Aspect of Agile Software Development
Quality – An Inherent Aspect of Agile Software Development

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CSC 8520: Artificial Intelligence Course Details
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Intelligent Systems
Intelligent Systems

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lecture01 - University of Virginia
lecture01 - University of Virginia

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What is Sentient AI? - UNC Computer Science
What is Sentient AI? - UNC Computer Science

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Artificial Intelligence Lesson Plan

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Part B - KB e-learning Site for IB ITGS and IGCSE ICT
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... relationships between simple computing elements and biological neurons. They show that it was possible to compute any computable function by networks of logical gates. Alan Turing publishes “Computer Machinery and Intelligence” where he proposed the so called Turing Test [1950]. In the 50s, papers d ...
The History of Artificial Intelligence
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... computers to augment human thinking, just as we use motors to augment human or horse power. Robotics and expert systems are major branches of that. The other is to use a computer's artificial intelligence to understand how humans think. In a humanoid way. If you test your programs not merely by what ...
Il Sole 24 ORE New Economy - the Department of Computer and
Il Sole 24 ORE New Economy - the Department of Computer and

... Mr Kearns, what do you think about the lack of creativity which is normally related to AI? This is the biggest problem for researchers, indeed. At the moment, the efficacy of AI is limited to obtain the better from existing information. There the is no creativity, in the sense that there is not an a ...
A Viewpoint on Embodied Synthetic Agency
A Viewpoint on Embodied Synthetic Agency

... Norbert Wiener said of the central nervous system, “its most characteristic activities are explicable only as circular processes, emerging from the nervous system into the muscles, and re-entering the nervous system through the sense organs, whether they be proprioceptors or organs of the special se ...
Can We Define Levels Of Artificial Intelligence?
Can We Define Levels Of Artificial Intelligence?

... the human is expected to answer truthfully is a limitation of the test that has often been criticized. This limitation can be overcome easily if it is postulated that the human can take the assistance of a computer. In other words, one could speak of a contest between a computer and a human assiste ...
AI Systems
AI Systems

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Machine Intelligence Lab
Machine Intelligence Lab

... development of machines that can do these things as well as humans can, or possibly better.  Another goal is to understand intelligent behavior whether it occurs in machines or in humans or other animals.  Computer systems have been built that perform symbolic integration, perform medical diagnosi ...
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Philosophy of artificial intelligence



The philosophy of artificial intelligence attempts to answer such questions as: Can a machine act intelligently? Can it solve any problem that a person would solve by thinking? Are human intelligence and machine intelligence the same? Is the human brain essentially a computer? Can a machine have a mind, mental states and consciousness in the same sense humans do? Can it feel how things are?These three questions reflect the divergent interests of AI researchers, cognitive scientists and philosophers respectively. The scientific answers to these questions depend on the definition of ""intelligence"" and ""consciousness"" and exactly which ""machines"" are under discussion.Important propositions in the philosophy of AI include:Turing's ""polite convention"": If a machine behaves as intelligently as a human being, then it is as intelligent as a human being. The Dartmouth proposal: ""Every aspect of learning or any other feature of intelligence can be so precisely described that a machine can be made to simulate it."" Newell and Simon's physical symbol system hypothesis: ""A physical symbol system has the necessary and sufficient means of general intelligent action."" Searle's strong AI hypothesis: ""The appropriately programmed computer with the right inputs and outputs would thereby have a mind in exactly the same sense human beings have minds."" Hobbes' mechanism: ""Reason is nothing but reckoning.""↑ ↑ ↑ ↑ ↑ ↑
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