osan
Member
- Joined
- Dec 26, 2009
- Messages
- 16,875
What say we just agree to disagree?
I wrote:
Facepalm till you knock yourself unconscious if it pleases you. As I gathered we were talking about the Turing test, not a modified version. The specific reference was whether the Turing test was valid and I pointed out that it was a matter of definitions. If we play fast and loose with them, then anything goes - sort of the way most professional politicians spend their existences as the mountebanks they are.
Then I wrote:
To which you responded with this:
Slaves were human so of course they could potentially demonstrate human intelligence. If you are expecting a goldfish to display human intelligence you will be waiting perhaps a very long time. The term "intelligence" doesn't apply only to humans. The point you raise is therefore irrelevant to the discourse unless your thesis is that human intelligence is the only kind that counts.
And so I asked:
To which you responded:
Are you suggesting the earth is flat?
Then to this:
You reply in seemingly irratinal fashion:
Not only unrelated to any valid argumentation relevant to the topic at hand, copping s somewhat snide and disrespectful tone in the deal. What is up with that? I was attempting to have an adult exchange and it comes to this.
Over and out.
I wrote:
The Turing test posits that a person interacting with a computer through a terminal such that if the exchanges cannot be differentiated from those one would have with a human at the other end, the machine is effectively intelligent. So yes, it is using human intelligence as the standard. Sure, it could be used with, say, a chimpanzee but that wasn't how the original idea was formulated.
*facepalm* Oh quit being a blowhard. I said from jump that this wasn't the original Turing test. I know how the Turing test was "originally formulated". This is a modified test.
Facepalm till you knock yourself unconscious if it pleases you. As I gathered we were talking about the Turing test, not a modified version. The specific reference was whether the Turing test was valid and I pointed out that it was a matter of definitions. If we play fast and loose with them, then anything goes - sort of the way most professional politicians spend their existences as the mountebanks they are.
Then I wrote:
Not without making very broad and unsound assumptions about what constitutes intelligence. Just because we may not be able to extract principles of behavior that we deem "intelligent", it does not follow that intelligence is not present. To believe that intelligence holds but one flavor, the human one, is ridiculous. Besides, who says that intelligence is the deciding factor in determining whether animals should be treated with respect?
To which you responded with this:
...Back to the original point, slaves could prove their intelligence by accomplishing tasks that required human intelligence. Might there be a dog intelligence? Of course. In fact I would say for certainty that there is. There's also bee intelligence and ant intelligence. But none of those entities have rights. Trees may also have a kind of intelligence. They can communicate to each other through chemicals that they are under an insect infestation. But most people would agree that tree intelligence has not been shown to the level that trees have rights.
Slaves were human so of course they could potentially demonstrate human intelligence. If you are expecting a goldfish to display human intelligence you will be waiting perhaps a very long time. The term "intelligence" doesn't apply only to humans. The point you raise is therefore irrelevant to the discourse unless your thesis is that human intelligence is the only kind that counts.
And so I asked:
What does the level of debate have to do with the truth? Flat earth/spherical earth was perhaps hotly debated at one time as well. That did not alter the truth even a whit.
To which you responded:
And so who's the arbiter of "truth"? You? Don't make me laugh!
Are you suggesting the earth is flat?
Then to this:
Definition 3 fits best our context and I would say that life is so very heavily implied.
You reply in seemingly irratinal fashion:
I don't know who the "we" is here. I'm not interested in your dictionary definition nor do I find it relevant or helpful. Reasoning by analogy I gave you an example of how slaves were shown to have intelligence and thus be dserving of rights. If you want to be obtuse because deep down you know animals can't pass the same test then fine. Whatever.
Not only unrelated to any valid argumentation relevant to the topic at hand, copping s somewhat snide and disrespectful tone in the deal. What is up with that? I was attempting to have an adult exchange and it comes to this.
Over and out.

