The question is, what can an AI think about the source of its existence? Can it understand that it was created by a creator? — Henri
Although AI is alone, during time it develops a language and can both talk to itself and write things down. — Henri
Can it understand that it was created by a creator? — Henri
If it has been programmed to live in its environment and nothing else how could it even dedicate processing time to it? — Sir2u
The question is, what can an AI think about the source of its existence? Can it understand that it was created by a creator? — Henri
this AI is conscious being — Henri
The question is, what can an AI think about the source of its existence? Can it understand that it was created by a creator? — Henri
Why would an AI dedicate resources to a question which is not relevant to it's operation? — Akanthinos
To put this another way, algorithms do not have emergent properties. — fishfry
Yeah. Ok. I was reading your post with a bit of a raised eyebrow, but this is the part where I know you are just pulling this crap out of your ass. Neural nets are an actual examples of emergent algorithms (that's literally how they are called!). — Akanthinos
You are confusing media hype with actual computer science. That is exactly the point I'm making. Calling a classical program an "emergent algorithm" does not falsify the principles and laws of computer science. Calling it something it's not does have the benefit of drawing in credulous reporters and their readers, including you. — fishfry
"Maybe, in this evidently-inconsistent 'physical' world there's physics that I just don't know about yet, that will consistently explain all this. In any case, even if this is a nonsense cartoon story, it's a nonsense cartoon story that was already timelessly there among the abstract objects. A computer simulation can't create something that's already timelessly there. So this world isn't created by a computer simulation" — Michael Ossipoff
Take Chang and Perrig on emergent algorithms regarding cluster formation — Akanthinos
In philosophy, systems theory, science, and art, emergence is a phenomenon whereby larger entities arise through interactions among smaller or simpler entities such that the larger entities exhibit properties the smaller/simpler entities do not exhibit.
Take Chang and Perrig on emergent algorithms regarding cluster formation — Akanthinos
So this mysticism and gee-whiz-ism around AI's is what I'm objecting to.
And the word emergence is a symptom of that. — fishfry
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