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Philosophy and Cogsci The Turing Test Joe Lau Alan Turing (1912-1954) Famous British mathematician / logician Mathematical theory of computation. Helped cracked the German Uboat Enigma code in WWII. A homosexual, arrested in 1952. Committed suicide. More information More on Turing’s life : Turing’s biographer Andrew Hodges : http://www.turing.com/turing/Turing.html Computation theory Book : Boolos and Jeffrey’s Computability and Logic Article : in Stanford Encyclopaedia of Philosophy (web) Topic paper in Mind “Computing Machinery and Intelligence” 1950 Introduced computers to philosophy Argued for the plausibility of thinking machines Proposed “Turing test” often cited as criterion of success for AI. Turing’s Proposal The question “Can machines think?” is too vague. What are machines? What is thinking? Replace by : “Can computers pass the imitation game?” The Imitation Game : Judge talks to a man and woman through teletype and has to decide which is which. Turing : What if the man is replaced by a computer? Passing the test = the judge cannot do better than guessing. What is the test for? What is the purpose? One proposal : provides a (behavioral) definition of thinking Probably not : Turing thought that the question of whether machines can think is “too meaningless to deserve discussion”. A bad definition anyway Definition : X = ABC In a correct definition, ABC are the necessary and sufficient conditions for X. Passing the test is neither necessary nor sufficient for thinking. Passing not necessary Things that think, but which fail the test : Systems that can think but cannot communicate with a language, or too shy or paranoid to do so. The judge might be a computer expert who can detect subtle hints. Turing on clever judges Turing recognized an objection similar to the last point. He said that "we need not be troubled" as long as there are machines that can pass the test. So he did concede that passing the test is not necessary for being able to think. Also not sufficient Things that cannot think, but pass the test : Blockhead : a stupid machine that stores all possible conversations within some limited duration. Blockhead is logically possible, but not practically possible. Blockhead Ned Block “The Mind as the Software of the Brain” All possible opening lines from the judge All possible replies Proposal The test is a practical sufficiency test for intelligent thinking. Often taken as a practical goal for AI. Allows for thinking computers that fail the test. Other issues Problems with judges Who can be a judge? What if a computer passes the test because of a stupid judge? Real tests The Loeber Prize