When a Greek philosopher starts asking you what a thing actually is, sooner or later you might find yourself saying “I know it when I see it”. (That plucked chicken is not a man).
So, the neural networks that recognize things without anyone being able to explain how they actually do it, are actually doing it the right way.
“The definition of intelligence is the following: take the value of the upper left pixel in my retina, and multiply it by 0.02378. Take the value from the next pixel and multiply it by 0.02376. Take the value...
(20 years later)
...and if you add this together, and the result is greater than 0.86745, then yes, I would call such system ‘intelligent’. Any objections?”
Socrates: “Please someone pass me the hemlock already.”
When a Greek philosopher starts asking you what a thing actually is, sooner or later you might find yourself saying “I know it when I see it”. (That plucked chicken is not a man).
So, the neural networks that recognize things without anyone being able to explain how they actually do it, are actually doing it the right way.
“The definition of intelligence is the following: take the value of the upper left pixel in my retina, and multiply it by 0.02378. Take the value from the next pixel and multiply it by 0.02376. Take the value...
(20 years later)
...and if you add this together, and the result is greater than 0.86745, then yes, I would call such system ‘intelligent’. Any objections?”
Socrates: “Please someone pass me the hemlock already.”