In terms how of complex natural languages etc. are in an abstract sense? I’d expect that to have been more or less the same for the past few tens of millennia… And the argument that catching a baseball (or something like that) is easy for humans but explicitly writing down and solving the differential equations that govern its motion would be much harder is something that IIRC dates back to the mid-20th century.
EDIT: And BTW...
If people do not believe that mathematics is simple, it is only because they do not realize how complicated life is.
-- John von Neumann in 1947. (Actually I was looking for a different quote, but this one will do. EDIT 2: That was “You insist that there is something that a machine can’t do. If you will tell me precisely what it is that a machine cannot do, then I can always make a machine which will do just that.”)
In terms how of complex natural languages etc. are in an abstract sense?
I suspect he means that the knowledge base around Moravec’s paradox has seeped into many sciences and stories and our implicit understanding of the world.
In a sense, all that we had to know what that after 50 years of trying, there were no marching robots but there were decent chess computer programs… to suspect that something non-intuitive was going on here.
How do you separate this from hindsight bias?
Now I might be mis-remembering things, but...
The world is a different place now. Unless your time frame for “before I knew it had a name” is ~1970?
In terms how of complex natural languages etc. are in an abstract sense? I’d expect that to have been more or less the same for the past few tens of millennia… And the argument that catching a baseball (or something like that) is easy for humans but explicitly writing down and solving the differential equations that govern its motion would be much harder is something that IIRC dates back to the mid-20th century.
EDIT: And BTW...
-- John von Neumann in 1947. (Actually I was looking for a different quote, but this one will do. EDIT 2: That was “You insist that there is something that a machine can’t do. If you will tell me precisely what it is that a machine cannot do, then I can always make a machine which will do just that.”)
I suspect he means that the knowledge base around Moravec’s paradox has seeped into many sciences and stories and our implicit understanding of the world.
In a sense, all that we had to know what that after 50 years of trying, there were no marching robots but there were decent chess computer programs… to suspect that something non-intuitive was going on here.