字幕列表 影片播放 列印英文字幕 Dear Fellow Scholars, this is Two Minute Papers with Károly Zsolnai-Fehér. Whether a technique can be deemed as artificial intelligence or not, is a question that I would like to see exiled from future debates and argumentations. Of course, anyone may take part in any debate of their liking, I would, however, like to point out the futility of such endeavors. Let me explain why. Ever heard a parent and a son having an argument whether the son is an adult or not? "You are not an adult, because adults don't behave like this!" And arguments like that. The argument is not really about whether a person is an adult, but it is about the very definition of an adult. Do we define an adult as someone who has common sense and behaves responsibly? Or is it enough to be of 18 or 21 years old to be an adult? If we decide which definition we go for, the scaffolding for the entire argument crumbles, because it is built upon a term for which the definition is not agreed upon. I feel that we have it the same with artificial intelligence in many debates. The definition of artificial intelligence, or at least one possible definition, is the following: Artificial intelligence (AI) is the intelligence exhibited by machines or software. It is a bit of a copout, so we have to go and check the definition of intelligence. There are multiple definitions, but for the sake of argument, we are going to let this one slip. One possible definition for intelligence is "the ability to learn or understand things or to deal with new or difficult situations". Now, this sentence is teeming with ill-defined terms, such as learn, understand things, deal with new situations, difficult situations. So, if we have a shaky definition of artificial intelligence, it is quite possibly pointless to argue whether self driving cars can be deemed artificially intelligent or not. Imagine two physicists arguing whether a material is ferromagnetic, but none of them has the slightest idea what magnetism means. If we look at it like this, it is very easy to see the futility of such arguments. If we had as poorly crafted definitions in physics as we have for intelligence, magnetism would be defined as "stuff pulling on other stuff". This is the first part of the argument. The second part is that artificial intelligence is imagined to be a mystical thing that only exists in the future, or it may exist in the present, but it has to be shrouded in mystery. Let me give you an example. The A* algorithm used to be called AI and was (and still is) widely taught in AI courses at many universities. A* is used in many pathfinding situations where we seek to go from A to B on a map in the presence of possible obstacles. It is widely used in robotics and computer games. Nowadays, calling a pathfinding algorithm AI is simply preposterous. It is a simple, well-understood technique that does something we are used to. Imagine someone waving their GPS device claiming that there is AI in there. But back then, when it was new, hazy, and poorly understood, we put it in a drawer with the label "AI" on it. As soon as people start to understand it, they pull it out from this drawer, and disgustedly claim, "Well, this is not AI, it's just a graph algorithm. Graphs are not AI, that's just mathematics." It is important to note that none of the techniques that we see today are mysterious in any sense, the entirety of deep learning and everything else is a series of carefully prescribed mathematical operations. I will try to briefly assess the two arguments: - Arguments about AI are not about the algorithms they seem to be discussing, but about the very definition of AI, which is ill-defined at best. - AI is imagined to be a mystical thing that only exists in the future, or it may exist in the present, but it has to be, in some way, shrouded in mystery. The good news is that using this knowledge, we can easily defuse such futile arguments. If someone says that deep learning is not artificial intelligence because all it does is matrix algebra, we can ask: "okay, what is your definition of artificial intelligence?" If this person defines AI as being a sentient learning being akin to humans, then we have immediately arrived to a conclusion that deep learning is not AI. Let us not fool ourselves by thinking that we are arguing about things when we are simply arguing about definitions. As soon as the definition is agreed upon, the conclusion emerges effortlessly. Thanks for watching, and for your generous support, and I'll see you next time!
B1 中級 美國腔 沒有所謂的人工智能 - 兩分鐘論文 (No Such Thing As Artificial Intelligence | Two Minute Papers) 115 15 alex 發佈於 2021 年 01 月 14 日 更多分享 分享 收藏 回報 影片單字