The most famous challenge to the aims of cognitive science and artificial intelligence is the philosopher John Searle's 1980 'Chinese Room' argument. Searle argued that the fact that machines can be devised to respond to input with the same output that a mind would give does not mean that mind and machine are doing the same thing: for the latter lacks understanding. Nineteen specially written essays by leading scientists and philosophers assess, renew, and respond to this crucial challenge―fascinating reading for anyone interested in minds and computers
John Searle\u27s famous thought experiment concerning the Chinese Room (CR) is cast rhetorically in ...
Searle's celebrated Chinese Room Argument has shaken the foundations of Artificial Intelligence. Man...
Summary of Searle's "Chinese Room Argument" showing that cognition cannot be just computation. Searl...
Searle's Chinese Room Argument showed a fatal flaw in computationalism (the idea that mental states ...
Are computers and minds alike? In computer functionalism, also known as strong AI, it is believed th...
Searle (1980) in his Chinese Room thought experiment sets out to show that a purely formalist accoun...
The paper is concerned with John Searle’s famous Chinese room argument. Despite being objected to by...
Perhaps the most famous critic of computational theories of mind is John Searle. His best-known work...
“Could a machine think?” asks John R. Searle in his paper Minds, Brains, and Programs. He answers th...
Searle's Chinese Room Argument showed a fatal flaw in computationalism ...
Whether human thinking can be formalized and whether machines can think in a human sense are questio...
Detractors of Searle’s Chinese Room Argument have arrived at a virtual consensus that the mental pro...
This anthology’s 20 new articles and bibliography attest to continued interest in Searle’s (1980) Ch...
Introduction: The question of what constitutes understanding is often discussed without considering ...
John Searle\u27s famous thought experiment concerning the Chinese Room (CR) is cast rhetorically in ...
John Searle\u27s famous thought experiment concerning the Chinese Room (CR) is cast rhetorically in ...
Searle's celebrated Chinese Room Argument has shaken the foundations of Artificial Intelligence. Man...
Summary of Searle's "Chinese Room Argument" showing that cognition cannot be just computation. Searl...
Searle's Chinese Room Argument showed a fatal flaw in computationalism (the idea that mental states ...
Are computers and minds alike? In computer functionalism, also known as strong AI, it is believed th...
Searle (1980) in his Chinese Room thought experiment sets out to show that a purely formalist accoun...
The paper is concerned with John Searle’s famous Chinese room argument. Despite being objected to by...
Perhaps the most famous critic of computational theories of mind is John Searle. His best-known work...
“Could a machine think?” asks John R. Searle in his paper Minds, Brains, and Programs. He answers th...
Searle's Chinese Room Argument showed a fatal flaw in computationalism ...
Whether human thinking can be formalized and whether machines can think in a human sense are questio...
Detractors of Searle’s Chinese Room Argument have arrived at a virtual consensus that the mental pro...
This anthology’s 20 new articles and bibliography attest to continued interest in Searle’s (1980) Ch...
Introduction: The question of what constitutes understanding is often discussed without considering ...
John Searle\u27s famous thought experiment concerning the Chinese Room (CR) is cast rhetorically in ...
John Searle\u27s famous thought experiment concerning the Chinese Room (CR) is cast rhetorically in ...
Searle's celebrated Chinese Room Argument has shaken the foundations of Artificial Intelligence. Man...
Summary of Searle's "Chinese Room Argument" showing that cognition cannot be just computation. Searl...