Errors from transposing or misreading numbers, placing the decimal in the wrong location, etc. The machine mind has a “perfect cache” to hold numbers, concepts, and steps involved. Math is just the simple example of their ability. Such machine minds will be able to hold every state and federal law in their mind, and could re-draft legislation that is “clean” while porting case law from the old to the new legal references.
Errors from transposing or misreading numbers, placing the decimal in the wrong location, etc. The machine mind has a “perfect cache” to hold numbers, concepts, and steps involved. Math is just the simple example of their ability. Such machine minds will be able to hold every state and federal law in their mind, and could re-draft legislation that is “clean” while porting case law from the old to the new legal references.
*for an example of current tech getting simple math wrong: https://twitter.com/KordingLab/status/1588625510804119553?s=20&t=lIJcvTaFTLK8ZlgEfT-NfA
It’s part of human intelligence to make errors. Making errors is a sign of human-like intelligence.
You could imagine an AGI that doesn’t make any mistakes, but the presence of errors is no argument against it achieving human-like performance.
It’s interesting that you completely ignored the question about what you believe will be the likely capabilities of near-future technology like Gato.