I read the Hubert Dreyfus book you linked to (had to buy it used on Amazon). I don’t feel it gave me a deeper understanding of the problem or convinced me of any specific insurmountable difficulty in achieving AGI. (And that was quite a disappointment given all the attention and recommendation I saw for it.) All that I found memorable about it was a long string of, “They tried this … but the problem is really hard” over and over.
Do you (or anyone else here) have a more positive appraisal of what can be learned from it?
I read the Hubert Dreyfus book you linked to (had to buy it used on Amazon). I don’t feel it gave me a deeper understanding of the problem or convinced me of any specific insurmountable difficulty in achieving AGI. (And that was quite a disappointment given all the attention and recommendation I saw for it.) All that I found memorable about it was a long string of, “They tried this … but the problem is really hard” over and over.
Do you (or anyone else here) have a more positive appraisal of what can be learned from it?