Paradigmatic progress in the sciences has stalled since the 1970ies. There is disagreement about whether we have just figured out all the relevant paradigms, or whether we shifted from answering questions (which is cross disciplinary) to applying methods (cementing disciplines).
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This is especially blatant in academic AI: researchers don't take interesting stances about psychology or philosophy as they did in the 1960ies. There is also no consequential disagreement, just methodological competition between a focus on statistics, logic, applications etc.
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This coincides with understanding scientists as generic: ideas were once thought to be creations of individuals, now we think science is done by whoever we pay to do so. Status in science does not result from a unique perspective, but from diligence in an affirmative environment.
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There are no more Wiener, Turing, Minsky, Chomsky, Solomonoff, etc., not because great thinkers no longer exist, but because society at large cannot tell a public speaker from a deep thinker, and academia itself stopped caring about them.
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Would you consider yourself to be among those autonomous intellects?
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I am way less sharp than the impressive feral intellects of Steven Wolfram, Ed Fredkin or Eliezer Yudkowsky, and my own contributions to the Weltgeist are inconsequential, but I am certainly autonomous.
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How do you feel about the HCI stuff
@worrydream is doing these days?Thanks. Twitter will use this to make your timeline better. UndoUndo
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