Artificial intelligence

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ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE JOHN PESCO ALEX MOORE TRAVIS PARSONS

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dillard wright philosophy presentation john alex travis

Transcript of Artificial intelligence

  • 1. ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCEJOHN PESCOALEX MOORETRAVIS PARSONS

2. CAN MACHINES THINK?Hollywood would makeus think that they can!Can anyone name somefamous robots? 3. Robot- (n.) amachine capable ofcarrying out acomplex series ofactionsautomatically,especially oneprogrammable by acomputer. 4. ALAN TURING: THE (L)IMITATION GAME(1912-1954)Invented the Turing Test to identifyintelligence in machines.Emotions cant be interpreted withmathematics. 5. THE TURING TEST, WHEN WONT WE RECOGNIZE AI? AI imitates ourresponses fluently AI has freewill todeviate from setinstructions.From Blade Runner 6. JOHN SEARLE: GANGING UP ON THE IVY LEAGUE(1932-)Proposed the Chinese room experiment.Intentionality is biological, not mechanical.-Whatever it is that the brain does to produceintentionality, it cannot consist in instantiating aprogram since no program, by itself, is sufficientfor intentionality. 7. CHINESE ROOM VS THE MATRIXNeo is in the lockedroom now.He may be a kung-fumaster, but onlywhen plugged intothe Matrix.He needs a programwith specificinstructions in orderto interpret what allof it means. (TheMatrix) 8. PUSH IT TO THE LIMIT Power restrictions Physical restrictions Mathematics as a limitingfactorQuick processing andcontrolling motion in machinesrequires lots of power, and thematerials used have certainlimits when introduced toelectricity or other forms ofenergy. 9. FINDING NEW POWER SOURCES?The matrixdepicts thateach of us areliving in adream-state,and machinesare harvestingus for the smallamounts ofelectricityavailable in ourbodies.The humanbody onlyproduces 10 to100 millivolts.Biological powersources are areality. But theamount of powerproduced isntenough to powerthe demand of anycomplicatedmachine. 10. WATSON, THE Q/A MASTER Information came from specialized databases storinginformation in the physical RAM(random access memory). Specialized software that recognizes key phrases and wordstypically present in questions. Used a 16 terabytes of RAM instead of standard harddrives for quicker access Utilized 90 processors with each processor having 32processing cores (2880) 11. THE LITTLE HONDA THAT COULD ASIMO- Advanced Step in Innovative Mobility. 51.8 volt battery that lasts only 1 hour and weighs 13pounds. 110 lbs. total. 57 Degrees of motions. 38 of which are in the handsand ankles. Capable grip strength of a meager .5kg. 12. SENTIENT BEINGS, WHEN ROBOTS HAVE FEELINGS 13. ASIMOVS LAWS OF ROBOTICS (NOT ACTUAL LAWS) These are still programmed rulesdesigned for fiction. Military robots are designed tokill you. There are no real safeguards. Robots take our jobs. That hurtsus. Goes against first law.1. A robot may not injure a human being or,through inaction, allow a human being to come toharm.2. A robot must obey the orders given to it byhuman beings, except where such orders wouldconflict with the First Law.3. A robot must protect its own existence as longas such protection does not conflict with the Firstor Second Law. 14. QUICK, PULL THE PLUG! MY TOASTER IS TRYING TOKILL ME!What will happenif robots obtainfreewill?Freedom cant beprogrammed intoa computerlanguage.Robots dontmake decisions,they followprogrammedalgorithms. 15. THE ETHICS INVOLVEDIs it ethical to even try to builda piece of technology soadvanced that it cancompletely representourselves and the decisionswe make?What can we gain from beingable to control a robot in sucha way that it acts as ouravatar?