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Citation
Wheeler M (2010) Plastic Machines: Behavioural Diversity and the Turing Test. Kybernetes, 39 (3), pp. 466-480. http://www.emeraldinsight.com/journals.htm?issn=0368-492x; https://doi.org/10.1108/03684921011036187
Abstract
After proposing the Turing Test, Alan Turing himself considered a number of objections to the idea that a machine might eventually pass it. One of the objections discussed by Turing was that no machine will ever pass the Turing Test because no machine will ever ¡°have as much diversity of behaviour as a man¡±. He responded as follows: the ¡°criticism that a machine cannot have much diversity of behaviour is just a way of saying that it cannot have much storage capacity¡±. I shall argue that the objection cannot be dismissed so easily. The diversity exhibited by human behaviour is characterized by a kind of context-sensitive adaptive plasticity. Most of the time, human beings flexibly and fluently respond to what is relevant in a given situation. Moreover, ordinary human life involves an open-ended flow of shifting contexts to which our behaviour typically adapts in real time. For a machine to ¡°have as much diversity of behaviour as a man¡± would be for that machine to keep its responses and behaviour relevant within such a flow. Merely giving a machine the capacity to store a huge amount of information and an enormous number of behaviour-generating rules will not achieve this goal. By drawing on arguments presented originally by Descartes, and by making contact with the frame problem in artificial intelligence, I shall argue that the distinctive context-sensitive adaptive plasticity of human behaviour explains why the Turing Test is such a stringent test for the presence of thought, and why it is much harder to pass than Turing himself may have realized.
Keywords
artificial intelligence; Descartes; context; frame problem; Behaviour; Cybernetics; Man-machine interface; Artificial intelligence Computer programs; human behaviour; Descartes, Ren¨¦ 1596-1650; Cognitive science; Philosophy of mind
Journal
Kybernetes: Volume 39, Issue 3
Status | Published |
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Publication date | 31/12/2010 |
URL | |
Publisher | Emerald |
Publisher URL | |
ISSN | 0368-492X |
People (1)
Professor, Philosophy