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by goatlover
1816 days ago
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What in the parent post is dualist? Sounds more like an argument that animals have embodied intelligence. But as for being a dualist in the 21st century, there is always consciousness, information and math. All three of which can lead to some form of dualism/platonism. |
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1. What is special about a body that makes it impossible to have intelligence without it? (a) Is it possible for a quadriplegic person to be intelligent? (b) A blind and deaf person? ((c)What about that guy from Johnny Got His Gun?)
2. What is special about a childhood such that a machine cannot have it?
3. Would a person transplanted into a completely alien culture not be intelligent?
What is fundamentally being argued is the definition of "intelligence", and there are many fixed points of those arguments. Unfortunately, most of them (such as those that answer "no", "probably not", and "definitely not" to 1a, 1b, and 1c) don't really satisfy the intuitive meaning of "intelligence". That, and the general tone of the arguments, seem to imply the only acceptable meaning is dualism.
For example, "...there is always consciousness, information and math...": without a tight, and very technical, definition of consciousness, that seems to be assuming the conclusion. With a tight, and very technical, definition of consciousness, what is the problem with a machine demonstrating it?
Information? Check out knowledge, "justified true belief", and the Gettier problem (https://courses.physics.illinois.edu/phys419/sp2019/Gettier....).
Math? Me, I'm a formalist. It's all a game that we've made up the rules to.