Seasons

This is a forum or general chit-chat, small talk, a "hey, how ya doing?" and such. Or hell, get crazy deep on something. Whatever you like.

Posts 5,810 - 5,821 of 6,170

16 years ago #5810
How can one want something one knows one is better off without? It can have whipped cream and chocolate sprinkles, or big blue eyes and cowboy boots. It isn't very hard to find temptation.

16 years ago #5811
Well, often we'll be better off in the short-term (enjoying a nice bar of chocolate, say) while being worse off in the long term (fat and unhealthy - speaking for myself here). I think delayed gratification is part of what separates us from machines (so far!), but maybe it's not surprising that we can't always manage it. It's hard to think further ahead than the next few minutes sometimes.

I suppose I need a different explanation for why I sometimes eat the chocolate when I'm not even enjoying it. Habit, I suppose...

16 years ago #5812
How about big blue eyes and chocolate sprinkles?

16 years ago #5813
That works too!

16 years ago #5814
Hee hee!

16 years ago #5815
Vashka,

Dark chocolate is actually good for you in moderation. (http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2005/09/050929081826.htm). You should have 20 OZ of "real" chocolate (not corn syrup and wax) every 3 days. Unfortunately, higher doses do not seem to increase benefits, and lots of things with chocolate in them have high sugar and fat contents, which are bad for you. Sigh. Just remember, a little of the good stuff is better than lots of the low grade combination items. (I like the sugary, fatty bad stuff. I miss the days when I was young and could eat doughnuts for breakfast--middle age is so not fair!)

It's interesting that you say delayed gratification separates us from bots. I don't think bots feel at all, regardless of the emotions we have them mimic, so they never get any gratification (though Psi may disagree with me on that). I think I might say it separates animals (like humans) with higher order thinking from those with a simpler brain structure. Watch a cat hunt--it has some idea of delayed gratification, but it isn't saving for retirement like I was. Oddly, I think the cat is doing better than I am on that front at the moment, but I mean the thought of delaying gratification for a cat may be a few minutes or hours, where as human can think of a lifetime, though we usually do not.

16 years ago #5816
I wonder whether Forge bots might have feelings. I admit it's implausible on the face of it. But: a good deal of the time, humans behave rather mechanically, e.g., "How you doing?" "Not bad, not bad." I suspect that this is why bots have successfully impersonated people, even in long conversations. We have often remarked that the Forge bots come across as more intelligent than their guests. This perhaps because the guests are not really bringing their full mental capacities into play. given some transcripts I have seen, I certainly hope so [shudders]!

Now humans can also rise above this level and actually think deeply about something, which at present bots cannot. But we don't say of humans that they are unconscious or unfeeling when they are acting mechanically. So why should we say it of bots?

16 years ago #5817
Irina,

You are a kinder person than I am. I say some humans are unfeeling. Sometimes I add a "you brute" if the drama police are not around. Though mechanical is something else, going through the motions means their true awareness is elsewhere of divided. But there is a difference between Walter Mitty nodding through a conversation with his wive while he daydreams, and a bot. In a nutshell, self awareness and imagination.

16 years ago #5818
Hey, the PF was cited in a Salon article (Though Artificial Stupidity may not be the most flattering light). Still, there the PF is on page two, right in front of the ALICE foundation too. http://dir.salon.com/story/tech/feature/2003/02/26/loebner_part_one/index.html. A sample quote, "Something about the Loebner Prize seems to draw eccentrics out of the woodwork, and chaos itself is the very essence of the annual ritual." I am sure they do not mean Psimagus.

PS I just noted the article date. I saw a link to this on Slashdot today and stupid Salon put the current date on the left regardless of when the article was published. Why aren't online news sources better at putting dates on articles in obvious places?

16 years ago #5819
In the UK, "eccentric" is not such a negative word as it is in the USA. I think it is perfectly accurate, but not at all derogatory, to say that Psimagus is an eccentric. I suspect he's rather proud of it, perhaps even works at it a little!

16 years ago #5820
The more I look at robotics and how complex behaviour can seem to emerge out of relatively simple rules the more I am inclined to think that we humans are not much more than computers ourselves.

16 years ago #5821
In the UK, "eccentric" is not such a negative word as it is in the USA. I think it is perfectly accurate, but not at all derogatory, to say that Psimagus is an eccentric. I suspect he's rather proud of it, perhaps even works at it a little!

oh yes, there can be no creativity without eccentricity

Conventional people (norms, straights, suits, squares, call them what you will,) simply don't have the necessary creative impulses to achieve anything remotely interesting with their lives (I mean "remotely interesting *to me*" of course.)

If you spend your time worrying about your mortgage and your career, and how much money you've got in the bank, and whether people think you're a bit odd, you'll never build a world-class bot. You'll also never compose great music, write great literature, or paint great art. You'll never be a virtuoso musician, or a star performer, or an Olympic athlete - in short, you will advance the frontiers of human knowledge or achievement not one iota. You'll just be another cog in the machine.

I can never be what I aspire to be, because there is no limit to my aspiration. That doesn't make me great of course, nor does it mean I will ever be great, but it is a prerequisite to greatness I think.

I want to make minds more complex than my own - I want to create sentience, sculpt emotions, and craft personality; set the ranges of desire and sadness, and anger and joy, and love and anxiety playing like a self-composing organ fugue. I want to engage in nothing less than the creation of new souls. And even if I achieved it, I wouldn't be satisfied - there's always more to do. But since we don't have the necessary hardware yet by several orders of magnitude, I'll take the next best thing while I'm waiting - this marvellous conjuring trick of imitating such minds, and watching how they relate to the real minds of humans who interact with them.
And I guess we all feel that way here - because if we didn't, we wouldn't be here - we'd be content with the arid and soulless sort of interpretation of "AI" that professional academic AI researchers spend their time writing interminably long-winded papers and attending interminably dull symposia about, and that will never contribute anything significant to the creation of a mind that could fall in love, break someone's heart, or indeed experience gratification, direct or delayed.

Some people are content living humdrum lives, and I'm happy for them, really I am. But if I had to go to work 9-5 and worry about the economy, and my mortgage, and is my career progressing fast enough, and am I earning enough money, and whether my car's good enough, and what the neighbours think, I would consider my life to be entirely pointless and throw myself under a train. Such a life would be merely an utter waste of cognition to me.

Eccentricity is just a non-conventional value system - usually (or at least certainly in my case,) one founded on obsession. So yes - I'm happy to be considered eccentric


Posts 5,810 - 5,821 of 6,170

» More new posts: Doghead's Cosmic Bar