|
|
|
|
|
by lumenwrites
636 days ago
|
|
"Intelligence" is a poorly defined term prone to arguments about semantics and goalpost shifting. I think it's more productive to think about AI in terms of "effectiveness" or "capability". If you ask it, "what is the capital of France?", and it replies "Paris" - it doesn't matter whether it is intelligent or not, it is effective/capable at identifying the capital of France. Same goes for producing an image, writing SQL code that works, automating some % of intellectual labor, giving medical advice, solving an equation, piloting a drone, building and managing a profitable company. It is capable of various things to various degrees. If these capabilities are enough to make money, create risks, change the world in some significant way - that is the part that matters. Whether we call it "intelligence" or "probabilistically generaring syllables" is not important. |
|