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Does anyone else get the sense that the definition has been bastardized by the conflation of the two concurrent previous uses of "agent"? i.e. in AI, biology and informatics, "Agent" typically meant something: That had a form / self / embodiment. That could sense the environment and react to those perceptions. That possibly could learn, adapt, or change to various degrees of complexity, which would entail optionally being an "intelligent system". Meanwhile in common parlance, Agent meant: Someone who acts or behaves on behalf of another adaptively to accomplish something with some degree of freedom. And this might explain why so people say agent/agentic necessarily refers to "tool use" or "being able to overcome problems on the happy path" or "something capable of performing actions on an infinite loop while reacting" (the latter two in my opinion, conflates the meaning of "Intelligent system" or "Intelligent behavior"). Meanwhile, biologists might still reply to a single cell seemingly inert, or a group of bacteria in a colony, as an Agent (a more behaviouralist/chemical "look-deep-down" perspective) I think a lot of disappointment is that biologists/OG AI enthusiasts are looking for something truly adaptive, sensing, able to behave, "live" indefinitely, have acquire or set goals, and which might be able to if intelligent, work with other agents to accomplish things (e.g. a "society"). Meanwhile, people who just want an "AI HR Agent" just want something that can communicate, interview, discern good applicants, and book the interviews plus provide summary notes. These two things are very different. But both, could use tools etc (the key difference from ChatGPT which is enabling this new concept to be more useful than ChatGPT, alongside various forms of short term memory rather than "fresh-every-time-conversations). |