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Singularity Summit At Stanford Explores Future Of 'Superintelligence'
KurzweilAI.net ^ | 4/13/2006 | Staff

Posted on 04/13/2006 7:22:29 AM PDT by Neville72

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To: Neville72; betty boop
[ Singularity Summit At Stanford Explores Future Of 'Superintelligence' ]

AND when that "super intelligence" figures out that socialism is slavery by government and is a BAD THING.. The super intelligence program will mysteriously be de-funded.. and mankind can get back to being stupid..

81 posted on 04/13/2006 10:46:10 AM PDT by hosepipe (CAUTION: This propaganda is laced with hyperbole..)
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To: Jack Black
You've stated that several times, but you haven't really explained why you have this belief. Or at least your argument seems circular to me.

It goes back to 'sum of our parts' argument. If I'm right, and we are more than the simple combination of our components, then everything I have said is correct. If we are just the sum of our parts, then I'm wrong.

Believe me when I say this: I have written enough computer software to know beyond a shadow of a doubt that a solid-state electronic computer most emphatically *does not* think like a person does. It's method of problem solving isn't just different; it's totally foreign. It would be difficult to explain without resorting to either discrete mathematics, theoretical models, or source code. But I will say it this way: when a computer goes about solving even a very simple problem (such as sorting numbered items) it does so in a way that is shockingly inefficient from a human perspective. The only reason it can do it faster is because it processes so damned fast that the inefficiency doesn't matter. Well, that and the fact that the trillions of 1's and 0's inside of it interact in just the right way to generate the answer. It's not a matter of the computer thinking about it; it's a matter of an electric current coming in on a chip on a certain pin at a certain voltage when the state of 1 or 0 on all the other components in the machine are arranged in a certain pattern. Remember what I was saying aboutm free will? The machine, in that case, doesn't solve the problem because it chooses to, it solves it because it *physically* has no choice, and no matter how many transistors per IC, no matter how fast the processor is, it will solve that problem because the laws of physics allow no other result. I submit to you that that is not free will, no matter how complex and intricate it's built. Electric currents move in a predictable fashion, and those currents are the end-all be-all of a compuer's 'thinking'.

I can't prove that human beings don't work that way. But you can't prove that they do, and there's good reason to think that humans are different in their thought processes.
82 posted on 04/13/2006 10:48:55 AM PDT by JamesP81 (Socialism is based on how things should be. Capitalism is based on how things are, and deals with it)
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To: Fitzcarraldo
Does the brain even "compute" deterministically, like an Intel CPU?

Exactly one of the things I've been trying to say. We don't know the answer. My personal opinion is no, but it gets back to that argument about whether or not the universe allows non-determinism and randomness, something else that no one has figured out a way to prove either.

My personal opinion is that the brain more closely resembles a quantum computer. A computer generates a result, and examines it for validity. If it's valid, then good. If not, toss and find a new possible answer. However, when you solve a problem that way, I think your brain generates many answers simultaneously, which is more closely related to quantum computing than classical computing.
83 posted on 04/13/2006 10:52:40 AM PDT by JamesP81 (Socialism is based on how things should be. Capitalism is based on how things are, and deals with it)
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To: Fitzcarraldo
Does the brain even "compute" deterministically, like an Intel CPU? Or does it converge using myriad neuronal feedback loops on a match between an apparent "goal" and its apparent satisfactory conclusion?

None of these hypothesized processes are less deterministic than the other. "non-determinism" is really not being conceptualized correctly. You might be interested in the very broad range of exotic computational models known in literature, many of which look nothing like any model of computation you are familiar with. Non-axiomatic computational models, for example, are what many people here would (mis-)label as "non-deterministic" because it can express nothing with perfect certainty.

In fact, I would make the observation that just about everyone that uses the term "non-deterministic" with respect to computers really means "non-axiomatic".

84 posted on 04/13/2006 10:53:45 AM PDT by tortoise (All these moments lost in time, like tears in the rain.)
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To: Jack Black
Maybe the religious right would hold out for some fundamentalist interpretation and "soul test". But I would certainly support full rights for Replicants.

Speaking as someone from the religious right, I seriously doubt that there are many on the religious right that would oppose those civil rights.
85 posted on 04/13/2006 10:54:28 AM PDT by JamesP81 (Socialism is based on how things should be. Capitalism is based on how things are, and deals with it)
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To: tpaine
-- Ask your friendly ATF agent about making a machine gun. -- Then give some thought about who gets to decree what tools are to be "sinful".

I see your point.

Too bad we can't partition the world into regions where the Amish can be happy and unmolested, the SINers can be happy and the mushroom eaters can be likewise happy. I once hoped we could establish independent colonies around other stars for safety and separation, but I fear there is no time left for that.

86 posted on 04/13/2006 10:57:38 AM PDT by Fitzcarraldo
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To: tortoise
In fact, I would make the observation that just about everyone that uses the term "non-deterministic" with respect to computers really means "non-axiomatic".

Point taken. I remember my AI professor talking about some new research that cast doubt on the Axiom of Choice, the implications of which were huge.
87 posted on 04/13/2006 10:58:08 AM PDT by JamesP81 (Socialism is based on how things should be. Capitalism is based on how things are, and deals with it)
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To: JamesP81
Maybe the religious right would hold out for some fundamentalist interpretation and "soul test". But I would certainly support full rights for Replicants.

Replicants in Blade Runner were clones of humans, is that correct?

88 posted on 04/13/2006 11:07:01 AM PDT by Fitzcarraldo
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To: JamesP81
My personal opinion is no, but it gets back to that argument about whether or not the universe allows non-determinism and randomness, something else that no one has figured out a way to prove either.

One generally cannot prove the determinism of a system from within that system, due to "unpredictable" and "random" being effectively indistinguishable in such a case.

My personal opinion is that the brain more closely resembles a quantum computer. A computer generates a result, and examines it for validity. If it's valid, then good. If not, toss and find a new possible answer. However, when you solve a problem that way, I think your brain generates many answers simultaneously, which is more closely related to quantum computing than classical computing.

Quantum computing is equivalent to classical computing, and there is nothing that can be done on quantum computer that cannot be done on a classical computer in theory. The only thing quantum computing buys you is that it changes the computational complexity class of some algorithms (notably from exponential to polynomial). In other words, it makes certain types of deterministic computations vastly more efficient than they are on vanilla silicon.

(BTW, non-axiomatic computational models generally work by implicitly sifting all possible answers they are capable of expressing in parallel, selecting the best answer in a given context from the entire set. This is what you are essentially talking about. The details of how this works I will leave to literature.)

89 posted on 04/13/2006 11:11:04 AM PDT by tortoise (All these moments lost in time, like tears in the rain.)
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To: tortoise
BTW, non-axiomatic computational models generally work by implicitly sifting all possible answers they are capable of expressing in parallel, selecting the best answer in a given context from the entire set.

Yep. That's why a quantum computer can break the RSA code so much more easily than classical machines.

I continually find it amazing that computer science has a tendency to lead a person to attempt to deal with some of the most fundamental questions of human existence.
90 posted on 04/13/2006 11:19:53 AM PDT by JamesP81 (Socialism is based on how things should be. Capitalism is based on how things are, and deals with it)
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To: JamesP81
"-- Regardless of how intelligence begins -- whether spiritual or physical -- it seems to me there must be a spark, a jump-start, a something-else beyond computing ability. We're not the sum of our brain's computing power. --"

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~


Mirror Test
One benchmark for "self-awareness" in animals and people (and now robots as well) is whether they will perform self-directed actions when looking in a mirror.
When a mark is placed on the forehead of a child, they will only begin to inspect it on their own forehead at the age of 3 or 4. Adult bottlenose dolphins perform similarly in equivalent tests designed for underwater use.

There are a small number of AI programmers and computer scientists that have the idea that true intelligence, of the human kind, is only possible because of a spiritual influence; the soul.
I suppose I would count myself among them; I don't think a being the equal of a human can exist without a soul, because without he can never equal a man.

Are you saying that if a dolphin is proved to be an intelligent being, it must have what we see as a 'soul'?

The open question is if God is feeling like AI is a good thing and gives a soul to some AI we try to build or not. This, of course, doesn't even qualify as educated guesswork. It's a way out there WAG and we won't know if it's right or wrong for a long time. We may never.

I don't see 'soul' as a problem. -- I think its a given that intelligence makes its own morality.
-- It's self evident that the golden rule would make good sense to any entity that attains intelligence/'good sense'.

91 posted on 04/13/2006 11:20:53 AM PDT by tpaine
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To: Fitzcarraldo
Replicants in Blade Runner were clones of humans, is that correct?

I never watched Blade Runner. But I would certainly support the idea that a cloned human being is equal to a not-cloned human being under the law.
92 posted on 04/13/2006 11:20:58 AM PDT by JamesP81 (Socialism is based on how things should be. Capitalism is based on how things are, and deals with it)
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To: JamesP81
I remember my AI professor talking about some new research that cast doubt on the Axiom of Choice, the implications of which were huge.

That is something quite different, but yes, there are actually two different maths that depend on whether or not one assumes the Axiom of Choice. It is not a strictly necessary axiom in math apparently, and I expect mathematicians will be arguing about it for the foreseeable future.

Non-axiomatic computational models are something else, derived from non-axiomatic term logics (in the same way that classical computers use classic first-order logic), which has really only been fully formalized in the last decade or so. There are some interesting theorems that have been published in recent years that show that fully general intelligence is only expressible on non-axiomatic computational models, a kind of computational model with which we have very little experience with.

93 posted on 04/13/2006 11:21:08 AM PDT by tortoise (All these moments lost in time, like tears in the rain.)
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To: NoStaplesPlease
Re: But AI, I don't buy it.

I agree. I prefer the term Automated Intelligence.

There's nothing "artificial" about automating the decision process.

94 posted on 04/13/2006 11:21:20 AM PDT by ChadGore (VISUALIZE 62,041,268 Bush fans. We Vote.)
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To: Jack Black

The more I think about it, the more I think it would be inevitable that civil rights would be granted to such automatons. And my canine analogy is probably inadequate. So, ok, we're going to grant rights to these machines because it feels right.

I still worry that this is the logic of PETA, that because a chicken can register pain, it's illegal to kill them.

Or it's going to require a heretofore unheralded reconsideration of rights. Human rights for non-humans. Are we sure about this? Part of me thinks we will never build such machines -- or at least not in great numbers -- simply to avoid this. And do we really need machines that seem human?


95 posted on 04/13/2006 11:27:33 AM PDT by NoStaplesPlease
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To: Fitzcarraldo
Replicants in Blade Runner were clones of humans, is that correct?

Essentially, yes. They were augmented to have specific characterists, like better strength, sharper eyes and such. They were apparently vat-grown or something so that they didn't take a full 20 years to reach maturity. Their brains were somehow "imprinted" with memories simulating a childhood they never had actually lived.

It's a really good movie on lots of levels, consider renting it next time your at Blockbuster.

96 posted on 04/13/2006 11:28:14 AM PDT by Jack Black
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To: tpaine
It's self evident that the golden rule would make good sense to any entity that attains intelligence/'good sense'.

I think you're absolutely right. It just makes too much good common sense for it to be any other way.
97 posted on 04/13/2006 11:31:38 AM PDT by JamesP81 (Socialism is based on how things should be. Capitalism is based on how things are, and deals with it)
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To: JamesP81; Fitzcarraldo

The replicants were "biorobotic" -- see here: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Biorobotics

Robots imitating humans. As I've written immediately above this post, it seems likely that society would grant self-aware human-mimicking robots rights just because it would feel wrong to do otherwise, even as that opens cans of worms we're not ready for.

Now, I can certainly make a case that these biorobotic creatures should not necessarily be treated as equal to humans. Clone-born humans though, I agree, are still fully human and must be treated as such.


98 posted on 04/13/2006 11:32:02 AM PDT by NoStaplesPlease
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To: JamesP81
Yep. That's why a quantum computer can break the RSA code so much more easily than classical machines.

Apples and oranges though. I do not know of anyone that has shown non-axiomatic computation on quantum computers is generally more efficient than using classical computers. Everything done with quantum computers to date is classic axiomatic computation, albeit in a different fashion. Without thinking about it too hard, there are aspects of non-axiomatic computation that are probably not amenable to quantum shortcuts.

Non-axiomatic computers have an intrinsic massive parallelism, but it is a very different kind of parallelism than quantum computing exploits.

99 posted on 04/13/2006 11:32:52 AM PDT by tortoise (All these moments lost in time, like tears in the rain.)
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To: Jack Black
Our experience so far has not been that technology has progressively enslaved men

His argument is not so much that technology enslaves men as it is that in the attempt at conquest over "nature" some men obtain power over other men with technology as their instrument, and how the use of that power by earlier generations must necessarily effect later ones. The greater the power the greater the effect of that power on later generations. So the question becomes, when we eventually get a race of conditioners, unrestrained by values, who really can make all posterity whatever they want, through eugenics or whatever else, what will be the effect on that posterity?

Cordially,

100 posted on 04/13/2006 11:37:29 AM PDT by Diamond
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