A way to describe intelligence is that it is the power to produce abstraction. AI in the true sense would be Autonomous Abstraction. Current AI consists of recording abstractions generated by the human mind (via hard-coding rules, training ML models on human-labeled data, etc).
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If AI today isn't capable of autonomous abstraction, it isn't because it's a particularly hard technical problem. Rather, it's a subtle conceptual problem. It doesn't seem like many people are looking at it. You can't produce the right answers if you're asking the wrong questions
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AI today is to human intelligence what the phonograph was to human musicians. Superficially, it may seem like it has a comparable output & is ready to replace musicians (which was a real fear back then). But it has radically different capabilities: it's merely a recording device.
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Don't confuse music creation with sound recording. Musicians are the origin of music. Unlike a phonograph, they can play a never-played before score, or write never-heard before music. Or take up a new instrument. Or invent a new musical genre.
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Historically, we went technology to record sound to technology capable of helping with music production and creation. New, more powerful tools. Eventually, we will see open-ended autonomous music creation. This will be the trajectory of AI as well.
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From recorded abstraction, to cognitive augmentation tools, to autonomous abstraction.
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End of conversation
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Here are proposed some architectures for machines to learn abstractions without labels nor supervision: https://www.luca-dellanna.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/01/Techniques-for-the-Emergence-of-Meaning-in-ML.pdf …
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Isn’t the point of DL that abstractions are learned by the model that aren’t explicitly described in the dataset?
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