Jump to content
Wikipedia The Free Encyclopedia

Synthetic intelligence

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Alternate term for or form of artificial intelligence
Not to be confused with Artificial intelligence or Virtual intelligence.

Synthetic intelligence (SI) is an alternative/opposite term for artificial intelligence emphasizing that the intelligence of machines need not be an imitation or in any way artificial; it can be a genuine form of intelligence.[1] [2] John Haugeland proposes an analogy with simulated diamonds and synthetic diamonds—only the synthetic diamond is truly a diamond.[1] Synthetic means that which is produced by synthesis, combining parts to form a whole; colloquially, a human-made version of that which has arisen naturally. A "synthetic intelligence" would therefore be or appear human-made, but not a simulation.[3]

Terminology

[edit ]

The term was used by Haugeland in 1986 to describe artificial intelligence research up to that point,[1] which he called "good old fashioned artificial intelligence" or "GOFAI". AI's first generation of researchers firmly believed their techniques would lead to real, human-like intelligence in machines.[4] After the first AI winter, many AI researchers shifted their focus from artificial general intelligence to finding solutions for specific individual problems, such as machine learning, an approach to which some popular sources refer as "weak AI" or "applied AI."[5]

The term "synthetic AI" is now sometimes used by researchers in the field to separate their work (using subsymbolism, emergence, Psi-Theory, or other relatively new methods to define and create "true" intelligence) from previous attempts, particularly those of GOFAI or weak AI.[6] [7]

Sources disagree about exactly what constitutes "real" intelligence as opposed to "simulated" intelligence and therefore whether there is a meaningful distinction between artificial intelligence and synthetic intelligence. Russell and Norvig present this example:[8]

  1. "Can machines fly?" The answer is yes, because airplanes fly.
  2. "Can machines swim?" The answer is no, because submarines don't swim.
  3. "Can machines think?" Is this question like the first, or like the second?

Drew McDermott firmly believes that "thinking" should be construed like "flying". While discussing the electronic chess champion Deep Blue, he argues "Saying Deep Blue doesn't really think about chess is like saying an airplane doesn't really fly because it doesn't flap its wings."[9] [10] Edsger Dijkstra agrees that some find "the question whether machines can think as relevant as the question whether submarines can swim."[11]

John Searle, on the other hand, suggests that a thinking machine is, at best, a simulation, and writes "No one supposes that computer simulations of a five-alarm fire will burn the neighborhood down or that a computer simulation of a rainstorm will leave us all drenched."[12] The essential difference between a simulated mind and a real mind is one of the key points of his Chinese room argument.

Daniel Dennett believes that this is basically a disagreement about semantics, peripheral to the central questions of the philosophy of artificial intelligence. He notes that even a chemically perfect imitation of a Chateau Latour is still a fake, but that any vodka is real, no matter who made it.[13] Similarly, a perfect, molecule-by-molecule recreation of an original Picasso would be considered a "forgery", but any image of the Coca-Cola logo is completely real and subject to trademark laws. Russell and Norvig comment "we can conclude that in some cases, the behavior of an artifact is important, while in others it is the artifact's pedigree that matters. Which one is important in which case seems to be a matter of convention. But for artificial minds, there is no convention."[14]

See also

[edit ]

Notes

[edit ]

References

[edit ]
[edit ]
Look up synthetic intelligence in Wiktionary, the free dictionary.
Artificial Intelligence at Wikipedia's sister projects
Philosophers
Theories
Concepts
Related
Concepts
Theories
Philosophy of...
Related topics
Philosophers of science
Precursors
Main Topics
Algorithms
Related techniques
Metaheuristic methods
Related topics
Organizations
Conferences
Journals
Note: This template roughly follows the 2012 ACM Computing Classification System.
Hardware
Computer systems organization
Networks
Software organization
Software notations and tools
Software development
Theory of computation
Algorithms
Mathematics of computing
Information systems
Security
Human-centered computing
Concurrency
Artificial intelligence
Machine learning
Graphics
Applied computing
Specialized Platform Development
Fields
Topics
Main articles
Types
Classifications
Locomotion
Navigation and mapping
Research
Companies
Related
Technological
Sociological
Ecological
Climate change
Earth Overshoot Day
Biological
Extinction
Others
Astronomical
Eschatological
Others
Fictional
Organizations
General

AltStyle によって変換されたページ (->オリジナル) /