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by barfbagginus
805 days ago
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It doesn't matter what is under the hood. A statement can be useful - introduce new views, make valuable points, reduce risks, help resolve conflicts, etc - regardless of whether there is a ghost behind the text. It just needs to be logically sound, consistent with facts about the world, and objectively useful. Then it can make a real world contribution. The cause is that you don't know how to evaluate when a statement is useful on its own merits. That means that you have to fall back on judging statements based on the identity of the speaker. In the case of AI, your prejudice against math and formulas as effective forms of reasoning means you can't critically analyze - or gain benefit from - statements the AI makes. It's very similar to the internal blockage of a person who immediately dismisses anything a woman, racial minority, mentally ill, or queer person says. The only way to repair it is to spend time talking to the AI, reading about it, and learning how to debate ideas. That's the last thing someone with a prejudice wants to do. Curious investigation undermines the safety and certainty of bigoted beliefs. But it's essential if you want to have effective opinions about AI, and useful interactions with AI. |
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The article states that AI will never reach human intelligence, which LeCun defines as "reasoning, planning, persistent memory, and understanding the physical world."
I would argue that's still an extremely narrow definition of human intelligence. Even ignoring semantics current AIs cannot do any of those things, and to my lights never will for the same reasons LeCun says.