amorphos_ii wrote: ↑December 17th, 2023, 11:49 am
Is AI ‘intelligent’ and so what is intelligence anyway?
I will keep this simple to begin with…
if I had a sheet of paper with some answers upon it, then someone asked me a question, I then looked through the list of answers and found it, that does not mean I am intelligent.
So searching for answers from a list or from memory is I would argue, not intelligent. AI is not thinking et al.
A machine or software which uses algorithms and scripts, is in a roundabout sense mechanistic. Which also is not intelligent.
Should AI be called something else other than ‘intelligence’ to be correct.
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In my opinion there is a great risk that the cognitive science movement that poses that mind is a product of deterministic computational processes in the brain, paired with the growing culture of materialism, will pose that AI's capacity to empirically mimic human consciousness, implies that it is conscious.
What would it take to deny the claim that a sufficiently advanced AI is sentient? It would concern metaphysical philosophical theory, versus empirical evidence.
Teleonomy, a theoretical concept that states that life is a product of a deterministic program, is the frontier of AI consciousness. Teleonomic AI can be achieved through science.
All teleonomic behavior is characterized by two components. It is guided by a ‘program’, and it depends on the existence of some endpoint, goal, or terminus which is foreseen in the program that regulates the behavior. This endpoint might be a structure, a physiological function, the attainment of a new geographical position, or a ‘consummatory’ (Craig 1918) act in behavior. Each particular program is the result of natural selection, constantly adjusted by the selective value of the achieved endpoint.”
Mayr, Ernst. “The Multiple Meanings of Teleological” In Toward A New Philosophy of Biology: Observations of an Evolutionist, 38-66. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1988. pp. 44-5
Teleonomy is the theoretical cradle of evolutionary theorists.
When lower life is a mere deterministic program, then consciousness must be so as well, and that would imply that AI can achieve it through technological advancement.
An example reasoning by psychiatrist Ralph Lewis M.D. a few days ago on Psychology Today that shows what to expect when AI advances:
"
In principle, it may be possible to engineer sentient AI. Listed below are some of the characteristics that are probably necessary for something to be sentient."
When sufficient characteristics are met, how would it be possible to argue that AI is not sentient? Science relies on empirical evidence.