Speculations Concerning the First Ultraintelligent Machine (1965) [pdf]

74 points - today at 1:33 PM

Source

Comments

Lerc today at 6:09 PM
I think it's worth noting the date of this when people claim that AI is being rushed without asking any of the important questions of what it might mean for us. This has been a topic of serious discussion for many many years.

It feels like the people who laughed at these fanciful ideas then are the ones now pretending those same ideas are new revelations that have gone unconsidered.

NitpickLawyer today at 2:23 PM
> Let an ultraintelligent machine be defined as a machine that can far surpass all the intellectual activities of any man however clever.

That's a pretty early definition of what we now call ASI (Artificial Super Intelligence). In the next paragraph the author goes to describe what we today call the "singularity" (ASI designing better ASI). But that term seems to be associated to some very weird communities, so the concept is relegated to sci-fi. Even though we're already seeing signs of things we have working towards this. Interesting to see that in the past "Man" was more optimistic :)

> It is more probable than not that, within the twentieth century, an ultraintelligent machine will be built and that it will be the last invention that man need make, since it will lead to an “intelligence explosion.”

Well, that didn't happen.

> The first ultraintelligent machine will need to be ultraparallel, and is likely to be achieved with the help of a very large artificial neural net.

Right on, that we have.

> The required high degree of connectivity might be attained with the help of microminiature radio transmitters and receivers.

Hahaha, this is straight out of 60s-70s sci-fi, where their best futuristic interfaces were smaller CRT screens / flashy keys, etc.

> The first ultraintelligent machine will be educated partly by means of positive and negative reinforcement. The task of education will be eased if the machine is somewhat of a robot, sinae the activity of a robot is concrete. [...] the machine will be able to lem from experience, by means of positive and negative reinforcement, and the instruction of the machine will resemble that of a child.

Heh, nice early insights. They missed the how, but RL is the thing that ultimately made it "click" and be useful. And there is increasing talk about embodiment and how that'll help the next iteration of models. So there's that.

Overall a cool read. I skipped most of the middle part, only skimming for things here and there.

areznichenko today at 2:17 PM
[dead]