Bella wrote:Also, the major point on A.I. were it ever fully realized is that nobody would want it;
Slow that cart down please. I'd like to speak for myself. I'd really like to have my very own Cherry 2000. She could look like Alice Truman or Kelly LeBrock and I don't care what kind of Weird Science has to produce her. And I wouldn't give a shit if she wasn't intelligent at all.
http://youtu.be/kckEEQKXaCU
JohnRoth wrote:The basic fact is that we really can't define what "intelligence" is, let alone define what it would take to build a computer system that would do roughly the same thing.
I wouldn't attempt to build an AI to be intelligent. I would attempt to build an AI to simulate human abilities. Intelligence is like love. Metaphysical. You are not going to capture the metaphysical within a box. Just like love, there is no absolute intelligence. Unless, like myself, you believe in God. I don't think we're going to be able to design an algorithm with God-like abilities. (although as a computer programmer I often refer to the init process as the god process).
We cannot define intelligence, because just like love, it is infinite. We do not have the capacity to understand the infinite. Humanity thinks it's intelligent. Our uninvited UFO friends I'm certain beg to differ. If we are being visited by aliens, do you think they think we're intelligent? A species that kill each other over skin color? Religion? Who bang their heads on the wall to music? Why do you think they've never landed their spaceship? "I'm not going down there!! You're as crazy as they are!!!"
What it would take before any attempt to build an AI, would be to first overcome a major stumbling block in programming.
Gödel's incompleteness theorems and the Halting problem.
An aside:
It is interesting that one of the oldest computer languages in existence today was created for the sole purpose of AI research. It is just as interesting that it is undeniably the most powerful computer language in use today. No other language even comes close. There are things that can be done with Lisp that simply cannot be achieved by any other language. It has been and still remains my language of choice since I was a preteen. Simple. Powerful. Elegant. It hasn't changed much since 1958. It doesn't have to. Computers are still playing catch up. It is so powerful, that in the 70's, special computers were built to run it. Lisp Machines.
I have no doubt about the language that will be employed if such an undertaking of AI is achieved.