| > You say that "the community" derives facts or claims from unproved assumptions, yet at the same time you say that you "strongly tend to disagree" with those theories and that the theories are "flawed in the sense that they cannot account for subjective experience and agency, amongst other things" merely on account that they are neither confirmed nor unconfirmed. I am confused about your stance. You allow yourself to have strong opinions about something unknown yet criticize other people for the same. The assumptions I refer to are not only unproved, there is also increasing evidence that they are false. I do not criticize based on the assumption that there is subjective experience, but on the well developed idea that there must be something like 'subjective experience'. Here we enter the realm of philosophy, which by the way, is what science encounters when it runs out of answers. And this was precisely my point: AI research is based on assumptions that _need support or help_ from philosophy, not only neuroscience. But what is at stake here is the prevailing neurocentrism and scientificism characteristic of our era. > I think it is absolutely normal that the core of a theory is based on not directly testable assumptions. And it's normal that people push it forward if it bears fruits, that's not a fallacy in any way, that's normal inquiry that may or may not lead to successful results. That is correct and it is precisely why they are called 'theories': because the evidence points towards a specific direction but there is not yet enough evidence to call it a law. Yet different theories, based on different assumptions, demand that those assumptions be tested at the fundamental level: logical, epistemological, philosophical, etc. Regarding the theory that current LLM research could lead to human level intelligence, many people have the opinion that it can be discarded on fundamental grounds. Why? Because the assumptions that this theory stands on are flawed. An issue I repeatedly see in the community (about which Dreyfus already wrote in his 1972 book, confirmed in his 1992 book, and we still see today) is that challenging the fundamental flaws in which current AI research is based on immediately sparks outrage in the AI community, as if people challenging those assumptions are against AI or AI research at all. I think that is a really silly, childish and not very humble position, and ultimately slows down research. |