▲ | modeless 6 days ago | ||||||||||||||||
"We know how it moves" is not the reason the question of whether a submarine swims is not interesting. It's because the question is mainly about the definition of the word "swim" rather than about capabilities. > if that's what we mean by the question whether a machine can think That's the issue. The question of whether a machine can think (or reason) is a question of word definitions, not capabilities. The capabilities questions are the ones that matter. | |||||||||||||||||
▲ | griffzhowl 6 days ago | parent [-] | ||||||||||||||||
> The capabilities questions are the ones that matter. Yes, that's what I'm saying. I also think there's a clear sense in which asking whether machines can think is a question about capabilities, even though we would need a more precise definition of "thinking" to be able to answer it. So that's how I'd sum it up: we know the capabilities of submarines, and whether we say they're swimming or not doesn't answer any further question about those capabilities. We don't know the capabilities of machines; the interesting questions are about what they can do, and one (imprecise) way of asking that question is whether they can think | |||||||||||||||||
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