Lack of coherence in concepts of intelligence has implications for artificial intelligence. ‘Intelligence’ is an abstraction grounded in human experience while supposedly freed from the embodiment that is the basis of that experience. In addition to physical instantiation, embodiment is a condition of dependency, of an autopoietic system upon an environment, which thus matters to the system itself. The autonomy and general capability sought in artificial general intelligence implies artificially re-creating the organism’s natural condition of embodiment. That may not be feasible; and, if feasible, it may not be controllable or advantageous
Intelligence is a human construct to represent the ability to achieve goals. Given this wide berth, ...
Much of the basic non-technical vocabulary of artificial intelligence is surprisingly ambiguous. Som...
How do we come to know what we know? Why do some people seem to know more than others? What processe...
Lack of coherence in concepts of intelligence has implications for artificial intelligence. ‘Intelli...
The following looks at several problems and questions concerning our understanding of the word ‘inte...
This abstract delves into the intricate relationship between the abstract concept of intelligence an...
In the current discussions about “artificial intelligence” (AI) and “singularity”, both labels are u...
What is Artificial Intelligence? Some might say that we shouldn't worry about a strict definit...
Intelligenceis an ambiguous and generally poorly understood concept, and this becomes especially app...
In about a quarter century, we have witnessed the winter of AI (1990) being transformed and transpor...
The notion of intelligence is relevant to several fields of research, including cognitive and compar...
Terms Artificial General Intelligence (AGI) and Human-Level Artificial Intelligence (HLAI) have been...
Computers were originally developed for executing complex calculations fast and effectively. The int...
Artificial intelligence (AI) is loosely defined as machines that can accomplish tasks that humans wo...
A. Efimov, D. Dubrovsky, and F. Matveev explore limitations on the development of AI prese...
Intelligence is a human construct to represent the ability to achieve goals. Given this wide berth, ...
Much of the basic non-technical vocabulary of artificial intelligence is surprisingly ambiguous. Som...
How do we come to know what we know? Why do some people seem to know more than others? What processe...
Lack of coherence in concepts of intelligence has implications for artificial intelligence. ‘Intelli...
The following looks at several problems and questions concerning our understanding of the word ‘inte...
This abstract delves into the intricate relationship between the abstract concept of intelligence an...
In the current discussions about “artificial intelligence” (AI) and “singularity”, both labels are u...
What is Artificial Intelligence? Some might say that we shouldn't worry about a strict definit...
Intelligenceis an ambiguous and generally poorly understood concept, and this becomes especially app...
In about a quarter century, we have witnessed the winter of AI (1990) being transformed and transpor...
The notion of intelligence is relevant to several fields of research, including cognitive and compar...
Terms Artificial General Intelligence (AGI) and Human-Level Artificial Intelligence (HLAI) have been...
Computers were originally developed for executing complex calculations fast and effectively. The int...
Artificial intelligence (AI) is loosely defined as machines that can accomplish tasks that humans wo...
A. Efimov, D. Dubrovsky, and F. Matveev explore limitations on the development of AI prese...
Intelligence is a human construct to represent the ability to achieve goals. Given this wide berth, ...
Much of the basic non-technical vocabulary of artificial intelligence is surprisingly ambiguous. Som...
How do we come to know what we know? Why do some people seem to know more than others? What processe...