Hm? I was agreeing with your 2nd point. I was merely adding to that by pointing out that we’ve only recently begun to recognize non-human intelligence in species like crows (tool use), cetaceans (language), higher primates (tool use, language, and social organization); which leaves me concerned that, if an AI were to “emerge” that was very different than human intelligence, we’d likely fail to notice it, potentially cutting off an otherwise promising development path.
I don’t think we will fail to spot intelligence in AIs, since they have advocates, something that animals never had. But we have a problem in that “intelligence” seems to be a multidimensional continuum, so until we solve lots of different kinds of it, there will exist things that fit some form of it but really don’t deserve the unqualified name.
Recognizing the intelligence is something you pushed into the discussion, I just want to know why you think it’s important.
Hm? I was agreeing with your 2nd point. I was merely adding to that by pointing out that we’ve only recently begun to recognize non-human intelligence in species like crows (tool use), cetaceans (language), higher primates (tool use, language, and social organization); which leaves me concerned that, if an AI were to “emerge” that was very different than human intelligence, we’d likely fail to notice it, potentially cutting off an otherwise promising development path.
Oh ok, you have a completely new concern.
I don’t think we will fail to spot intelligence in AIs, since they have advocates, something that animals never had. But we have a problem in that “intelligence” seems to be a multidimensional continuum, so until we solve lots of different kinds of it, there will exist things that fit some form of it but really don’t deserve the unqualified name.