malloc wrote: ↑Wed Dec 18, 2024 11:25 am
Raphael wrote: ↑Wed Dec 18, 2024 11:03 amWell, that's not the way serious researchers into intelligence and related fields use the term. At least not any longer today; they might have used your understanding when those fields were new.
So the situation is much like how physicists use "work" to describe something quite distinct from the average person. Then let me clarify that I am talking about intelligence in the informal sense of skill at abstract mental activity.
Well, in that case — and like I already showed you — you’re beaten by a 11-line-of-code program. That doesn’t seem like a useful definition of intelligence to me!
More widely speaking, in terms of raw abstract skills, computers have had humans beat for years. Software like Mathematica can manipulate ten-line-long mathematical expressions in milliseconds, with perfect accuracy. SMT solvers like Z3 can solve logical problems which could take months for the best humans. If you define ‘intelligence’ to include everything where computers beat humans and nothing where humans beat computers, how is that a useful definition?
Regardless of what these researchers are seeking, I don't find it particularly useful to include everything the brain does under the umbrella of intelligence. That includes too much stuff that clearly has no relation to intelligence in the sense most people would understand it and leads to absurd conclusions like superintelligent houseflies or getting an erection as an expression of intelligence.
There is a difference between instincts and intelligence. Those things you described are purely instinctual — they might as well be hardcoded. Intelligence is a different story.
Let me perhaps put it another way. Travis recently mentioned the
Coffee Test — to go into a random kitchen, unknown to you, and make yourself a coffee. Leaving aside extraneous comments (which we discussed at the time), what skills does this require? You need the ability to locate unknown objects (without necessarily knowing their precise shape or location, which may be hidden), to work out how to use them, and to create a sequence of logical steps to achieve your goal given only what is available. This clearly requires intelligence. Not the
same kind of intelligence as that required by abstract thought, but still intelligence of a different kind. And it is this kind of intelligent problem-solving ability which computers are most clearly lacking.