FactChecker said:
Well, of course, a person with a fully developed brain becoming blind and paraplegic won't drop to "zero intelligence" overnight; especially knowing it still has other senses.
FactChecker said:
Comparing that to some of today's AI systems is like comparing a first-grade student to Einstein.
That is my point: Einstein is very intelligent, and a first-grade student is a little less. Therefore, if you consider a computer intelligent for accomplishing a human task, you should also consider a mechanical machine being intelligent to some level to accomplish a similar task, in a simpler form.
FactChecker said:
You keep mentioning speed. I'm not sure I agree.
I might be wrong, but I feel you are impressed at a machine that can solve problems almost instantly, while a human would take years to solve (analyzing millions of patterns, for example, or simply reading books to find information vs reading a database for a program). In such a scenario, the machine isn't smarter than the human, just faster.
FactChecker said:
2) What would you say about an AI program that:
a) Contains more facts on a subject than any human has. (like expert systems that combine the knowledge of many world experts)
Does having more knowledge make one more intelligent? Again, if we assume man-made objects are intelligent, that would mean a dictionary (a book) is more intelligent than any human.
FactChecker said:
b) Is able to acquire more experience on a subject than any human can possibly have.
Then you should consider a web crawler downloading all visited websites having some form of intelligence, because it accumulates knowledge in its database. The AI program is not intelligent because it finds what you expect it to find, given the mathematical tools you gave it. Otherwise, you would consider a simple algorithm that can locate a black dot on an image with a white background, also having some form of intelligence. Yet, it is just a tool that basically locates a "0" in a sea of "1"s.
FactChecker said:
c) Is able to piece more relevant facts together and reach conclusions than any human can
Again, this is just a tool that does the work commanded by the human; one that the human could do if given enough time (which might take many generations of humans for a complex problem).
I still fail to see how one can say that AI is "more intelligent" than humans, or on its way to it, unless one considers doing the work faster as a major contribution to what characterizes intelligence.
PeroK said:
By contrast, AlphaZero had to figure out for itself how to assess each position and what candidate moves it should consider (i.e. not just everything that the rules allow).
So you think a computer with an algorithm that uses the most commonly used passwords to crack a human-made password is a "smarter" machine than one using a brute force attack? It is only more efficient, which only proves that the programmer is smarter, not the machine.
The fact that the machine gathers the data as it plays the game is still just another tool used to eliminate the process of having humans filling a database, which would give the same results. It just saves time, with the disadvantage of no one knows exactly what is in the database. That doesn't make the machine more intelligent.
PeroK said:
Indeed, if the algorithms had been specified by humans, it would not have been so effective - as its neural network ultimately saw deeper into the game than any human had.
And that is a step towards independent intelligence. Even if in a limited sphere.
No, it is not. The fact that a single human brain cannot analyze the information in a given period of time, especially knowing there is also an energy limit that must be respected, doesn't mean the machine doing the job is "intelligent", even less that it has "independent intelligence". It just means that you can concentrate more power within a single machine to analyze a problem. It is not smarter, it is not smart, it is only efficient. Like using a powerful crane to lift heavy loads instead of having a single human making multiple trips or coordinating multiple humans to do the same work in the same period of time.