One thing the world has is an abundance of human minds. We actually do not need machines that think like humans—we have humans.
We have an abundance of ordinary human minds. We don’t have an abundance of genius human minds. For all I know, machines that thought like Shakespeare or Mill or Newton could be a godsend.
One can make a case that genius is precisely the degree to which one does not think like a human mind (at least in a more useful and/or beautiful way).
Depends how broadly you’re drawing the line around the ‘human mind’ concept. I’d say that since Shakespeare, Mill and Newton’s minds were all human minds, that’s a prima facie case for saying they think like humans.
We have an abundance of ordinary human minds. We don’t have an abundance of genius human minds. For all I know, machines that thought like Shakespeare or Mill or Newton could be a godsend.
One can make a case that genius is precisely the degree to which one does not think like a human mind (at least in a more useful and/or beautiful way).
Depends how broadly you’re drawing the line around the ‘human mind’ concept. I’d say that since Shakespeare, Mill and Newton’s minds were all human minds, that’s a prima facie case for saying they think like humans.