Can artificial intelligences suffer from mental illness?

Discussion in 'Intelligence & Machines' started by Plazma Inferno!, Aug 2, 2016.

  1. Michael 345 New year. PRESENT is 72 years oldl Valued Senior Member

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    Yes

    Those Lotto number generators which blow numbered balls around until one pops into the exit tube

    Not random?

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  3. someguy1 Registered Senior Member

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    I don't believe mind is a TM. We can disagree on that. But a lot of your posts have indicated to me that you are unclear on what a TM is and what it can -- and cannot -- do.

    You're the one who said properties of objects are subjective. I suspect you are not clearly saying what you intend to. You didn't choose to engage with the question I asked you.

    I'm afraid I don't see the complete chain of argument here. I'm not familiar enough with the consequences of Bell's inequality. If you can shed light on your remark, please do.

    Nothing precludes the possibility that Tinker Bell sprinkles fairy dust on the universe. What of it? Are you doing science or fairy tales?

    What exactly do you mean by emulation in this context?

    I call absolute big time bullpucky. You made the statement: "Computability is preserved by countability."

    Being very conversant with countability and somewhat conversant with computability, I said that this statement is meaningless. And that to the extent that it might be construed as meaningful, it's false.

    I challenged you for a LINK or a PROOF that "countability preserves computability." And you respond by saying "It's a direct demonstration." WHAT is a direct demonstration? You did not supply a demonstration. You simply made a statement that shows you are making up words and hoping I won't notice. I don't mean to be rude here but you are bullshitting about this.

    Proof or link. Or retraction.

    I did point out that cardinal equivalence is a very weak metric of the similarity of sets. The integers and rationals are very different in terms of order and topology. In fact the subject of computability depends CRUCIALLY on the ordinal nature of the natural numbers. There's a first, and a second, and a third, and so forth. The rational numbers have no such order.

    You chose to ignore my objections and just repeat your meaningless claim.

    That doesn't make for interesting dialog.

    Computation produces time? What nonsense is that? Link, proof, or retraction. You can't make up your own science and change the subject when challenged.


    Claim without evidence. Planck time is a feature of our current theory of physics. We have no idea if it's actually an aspect of the universe, or only of our state of knowledge of the universe.

    You're being so disingenuous that at some point I have to stop replying to your posts. A TM can't compute something that's not computable. You're just making up words and typing them in, hoping I'll get bored and stop responding, leaving you with the last word. You may well win that game with your current line of argument.

    You say a TM can compute something that's noncomputable? That's a square circle, a four-sided triangle. It's false by definition.

    So: "A TM can compute something noncomputable." Proof, link, or retraction.


    You need it but you haven't defined it. Once you define emulation your idea will be more clear. If by emulation you mean approximation, I agree with your point. But approximation's useless in this context.


    Contemporary physics does not allow for the possibility of infinitary computation.

    You're wrong. It does. We already have a well-developed theory, several theories in fact, of how infinitary and/or nondeterministic computation would work. What we DON'T have is any physical theory that would allow us to instantiate these ideas in the physical world.

    If you claim otherwise: Link, proof, or retraction.

    Because that's exactly what you said.

    And then just said again. You don't even seem to read your own posts.

    If you had a humble opinion, we could debate it. You keep going back and forth, taking my quotes out of context and changing the subject. It's frustrating. My frustration is probably making me sound rude. I'd prefer to stop responding to your posts before this gets worse. This most recent post of yours, I found disingenuous in the extreme. Maybe it's just me.

    Well clearly I don't understand what you're saying. Perhaps it's all my fault.

    I would just like link, proof, or retraction at the points I've indicated. Especially on your claim that "countability preserves computability."

    Oh and "A TM can compute something noncomputable." Link, proof, or retraction on that one too. Those two claims. If nothing else.
     
    Last edited: Feb 9, 2018
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  5. Q-reeus Banned Valued Senior Member

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    If 'true randomness' is so elusive and impossible to prove it even exists, no point arguing whether it can or has been implemented.
    Maybe if you chew over these two Wiki articles, something 'eureka' will emerge:
    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Artificial_consciousness
    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Noise-based_logic
    I have been deeply impressed with Laszlo Kish's work in general. A true genius.
     
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  7. Q-reeus Banned Valued Senior Member

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  8. Write4U Valued Senior Member

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    Thanksfor the links. I am particularly impressed with this quote from the Wiki ; AI_consciousness link'
    I have always maintained that an AI (or even Human Intelligence) cannot function just on its operating system.

    In order to be able make associative decisions, a period of "learning" (knowledge) is an absolute requirement, although verbal language cognition seems to have been solved, but must still be taught verbally by the user, voice recognition, accent, etc.

    In humans the baby begins to learn its environment from the moment it is born and exposed to the environment. I believe the current estimate for a human brain to learn basic survival skills is at about 16 years, after which it is assumed that sufficient knowledge has been gained to make associative decisions. Of course, some people never learn from experience, because they have not paid attention to causality.

    IOW, any "computational operating system" without knowledge will be unable to make associative cognitive decisions. A learning period is an absolute requirement for sentience to become functional.

    In commercial computers, certain types of learning is easy by downloading pertinent knowledge to the HD memory partition if the information is already symbolized, such as numbers, equations, fonts, etc. We even have spell checkers, which will suggest several optional words, if it the user has made a mistake in spelling.

    But downloading emotions, such as a "reward" system which provides motivation, on a computer would seem very difficult, or require a long period of learning.

    OTOH, humans are born with emotional experiences such as hunger, pain, discomfort, but do not have the knowledge of the causality, which must be learned "on the fly", so to speak. As soon as a baby experiences the emotion of hunger it begins to cry and mama will feed it and satisfy the hunger. Lesson learned, when you are hungry, eat something. "Potty training" may take weeks even in a 1 year old child to grasp the (dis)association between the potty and the diaper (or the floor).
    Even dogs are able to learn that when they must "void" to warn their keeper its time to open the door and let the dog out in the yard, so that it can relieve itself of it's discomfort. These emotional experiences are difficult to build into a AI.
    I believe this is due to chemical signals sent to the brain, rather than electric coding.

    IMO, an AI does not experience these types of physical chemical discomfort so it must be trained to recognize these and other human symptoms, such as bleeding, broken bones, head trauma, etc. "on the fly" and from experience.

    To humans those phenomena are clearly symbolic of injury. To an AI they are meaningless, it is not subject to such emotional experiences as pain, satisfaction, sadness, happiness, etc. so it cannot relate to those phenomena (empathy).

    So there is a certain dichotomy between teaching HI and AI .
    A human brain has the operational ability to experience emotion or to recognize someone else's discomfort, but must learn language, arithmetic, history, etc. which may take many years.

    An AI brain can easily learn some of those symbolized areas of knowledge by downloading all symbols which require only purely logical processing, to its HD, but must learn to recognize more subtle symbolic emotional expressions, which may take many years of exposure to human interactions.

    Once the AI learns that human "tears" can signify a range of emotions, it might be able to compare and associate that symbolic phenomenon with other environmental conditions, and identify the cause for the tears.
    Which would be a representation of artificial empathy.

    In the movie, I Robot, this dichotomy is clearly shown. Anyone who has seen the movie will remember the "wink", the meaning of which the robot had just learned.....

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    Using that "smiley" just reminded me of our keen symbolic associative powers. This type of downloadable symbolism might even prove useful in an AI.....

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    Last edited: Feb 9, 2018
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  9. Q-reeus Banned Valued Senior Member

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    Most everyone agrees AI must be trained initially. Anyway along those above lines, here's another rather lengthy article that 'forks' more back to the OP query:
    https://www.wired.com/story/how-to-build-a-self-conscious-ai-machine/
    I've saved it to HD as handy go-to reference. Among other things, a nice cure to some optimist's view that AI will naturally converge to pure, neuroses-free benevolence.
     
    Write4U likes this.
  10. iceaura Valued Senior Member

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    I said no such thing.
    I said the category we label "objective" is very useful, and worth firmly separating from other categories of mental event.
    https://faraday.physics.utoronto.ca/PVB/Harrison/BellsTheorem/BellsTheorem.html
    So?
    That's irrelevant, if you are talking about some hypothetical computation that produces the physical world in the first place.
    I think it can in principle emulate anything that operates on the same logic as a TM, to any degree of precision and accuracy required. Whether you wish to call what it is emulating a computation or not I don't care.
    Countability is one way of preserving step by step logical progression, describable by propositional calculus, within an infinitely "dense" range of logical inferences or "steps".
    As to the second, if you refrain from putting quote marks around your words as if they were mine the issue vanishes.
    Approximation gives you everything you need to emulate mental illness in a human mind or any other feature of the universe that operates by standard TM logic - in principle.
    For all you know, whatever is producing the universe is doing the same thing - its output is approximations in the first place. That is after all what current physical theory seems to indicate.
     
    Last edited: Feb 9, 2018
  11. someguy1 Registered Senior Member

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    727
    No, Pi is not a random number.

    Pi not random because its digits can be computed by a program. Even though its digits are statistically random as far as we know, they're deterministic. You can write a program that cranks out as many digits as you want. The digits look random but they are not actually random.
    Such a number is called a computable real number. A real number is computable is there is a program that, given n, outputs the n-th digit of pi within finitely many steps. Since a program must be a finite string of symbols, that means that we have a finite-length description of pi.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Computable_number

    There are in fact lots of finite-length, closed-form expressions for pi. There are a bunch of them here.

    http://mathworld.wolfram.com/PiFormulas.html

    For each formula, someone could write a program and crank out as many digits of pi as they like, subject only to limitations of computing resources. If you theoretically assumed unlimted resources, then every digit could be generated; and each individual digit could be generated in a finite number of steps.

    The moral of the story is that pi actually encodes only a finite amount of information. Once you have the finite-length program, you can get as many digits as you want.

    It's true that pi is irrational, meaning that it's not the ratio of two integers like 2/3 for example. But some irrational numbers are computable and some aren't. So for purposes of discussing randomness, what's important about pi is that it's computable.

    The noncomputable numbers are the real numbers that are truly random. They consist of infinitely many digits, and they're irrational, and there is no program or algorithm that cranks out their digits. To express a noncomputable number, you need to supply an actually infinite amount of information. You need to give every one of its decimal digits. There's no program that generates them.

    The noncomputable numbers are a subset of the real numbers that include all the rationals, and also some but not all of the irrationals.

    In fact the computable numbers are a subfield of the reals. That means the sum, difference, product, and (nonzero denominator) quotient of two computable numbers is computable.

    The rationals are another familiar subfield. The subfield of computable numbers contains all the rational, and then some but not all of the irrationals.

    Just like the rationals, the set of computable numbers is countable. That's because there are only countably many Turing machines.

    Yes, pi can be approximated to arbitrary precision by an algorithm. That actually makes it special. That makes it computable. Most real numbers aren't computable. Those are the random real numbers.

    Yes, pi is irrational. But not all irrational numbers are computable. Most aren't. When we talk about whether a real number is random or not, we care about computability. An irrational could be computable or noncomputable.

    An irrational number is one that can't be expressed as a ratio of integers, like 2/3. But if you think of an irrational number like sqrt(2), there's an algorithm that lets you determine each of its digits. So sqrt(2) is computable.

    Yes it's all over the place in math and physics. Pi is "out there" in the world in some way, waiting for us to discover it. What that means metaphysically, I don't know.
     
  12. someguy1 Registered Senior Member

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    What would have to be the case in order for those lotto numbers to be random?

    1) There would have to be randomness in the universe in the first place. This is something we currently do not know. And it's high on the list of things we may never know. So that's one problem.

    2) Even if there is randomness in the universe, our physical mechanism is subject to mechanical imperfection and bias. Those modified popcorn poppers filled with pingpong balls, have they been certified purely free of bias? I hope you can see that the answer is no. Nothing we build can be perfectly free of bias.

    In the 1970's some students built the world's first wearable computer and used it to win money by exploiting tiny imperfections in casino roulette wheels. Great story. Saw a documentary about them on cable tv once. One of the students got a bad burn when the computer shorted out against their skin. But the theory worked. Roulette wheels are not random.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eudaemons
     
  13. someguy1 Registered Senior Member

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    My point exactly. People write misleading articles about "true" random number can be based on cosmic rays or other quantum-mysterious processes. But they're not random. If it's a physical mechanism it can't be perfectly random. That's all I'm saying.

    Thanks much. Looks interesting. Will read.
     
  14. Michael 345 New year. PRESENT is 72 years oldl Valued Senior Member

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    OK I can go with that

    It would be a fairly pointless exercise but interesting if all Lotto winning number strings (say only those 20 digits long, or some other arbitrary length) If all Lotto winning numbers of that length were brought together to see if any were the same

    My guess would be no

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  15. Write4U Valued Senior Member

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    Isn't that what Max Tegmark is saying also? A mathematical universe?
     
  16. someguy1 Registered Senior Member

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    As far as I know he's saying the universe is a mathematical structure. I don't know how that relates to what I was talking about. Tegmark's paper is on my queue. I really want to sit myself down and work through his paper on MUH line by line. It would probably raise my blood pressure but also make me smarter.
     
  17. river

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    What Universe wouldn't be , mathematical ? How could a physical Universe not have mathematics embeded in it ?

    The Universe is physical , it's its Nature . The Universe by its very existence , as compared to nothing , must be .

    There is no other possibility , existence will always be , for infinity . It has nothing to do with mathematics .

    The existence of , any , any , I mean ANY mathematics is ALL based on physical objects . There is no getting around this fact .
     
  18. someguy1 Registered Senior Member

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    I was in the local convenience store the other day. A few people were standing around buying lottery tickets. Clerk tells me it's up to a couple hundred million. I buy a ticket. Didn't win.
     
  19. river

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    Millions of people didn't win .

    Dam tough to get even 3 numbers let alone 6 or 7 .
     
  20. someguy1 Registered Senior Member

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    I may have misunderstood your remark. I don't think it's central to the discussion.

    I'll take a run at the link. It's funny. Some things I have an affinity for, others make my eyes glaze. Articles about Bell's theorem are in the latter category. I know there's a thing called entanglement where two particles far apart have correlated states in the sense that when you measure one the other's state becomes determined. And that Chinese scientists recently demonstrated the effect from earth to space I think. I remember being amazed that they have a technique to identify particular photons. That's everything I know about it.

    That was in response to my saying, "Contemporary physics does not allow for the possibility of infinitary computation." And I said that because you are claiming that infinitary computation might be the ultimate answer to our philosophical mysteries. SO ... if that is true, and I think it might well be, then we will need new physics. Because existing physics doesn't allow infinitary computation.

    I do NOT believe the world is a computation, as computation is currently understood.

    A thing is computable if and only if it is the output of a TM that halts. That's the definition.

    So it's not possible for a TM to compute something that's noncomputable. You're going against the standard definition. When you make up your own meanings for technical terms, it's not conducive to conversation. You claimed a TM can compute something that's not computable. That's absurd. Not because it's a fact of nature. But because it's a fact of definition.

    But that's mathematically false. Countability does not preserve order. Countability does NOT preserve step by step logical progression. That's basic math.

    You're dancing where I challenged you to post a link, a proof, or a retraction for your meaningless claim that "countability preserves computability." It does not. When you talk about step-by-step anything, you are talking about ordinals. There are countable ordinals that are not computable; indeed, that do not even have notations. You are making claims about countable ordinals that are not true. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Large_countable_ordinal

    When you name-drop Bell's inequality I admit I am ignorant. Why don't you likewise admit that you're not up on ordinals and the theory of computation. You can't bluff your way through this.

    An infinitely dense range of logical inferences? That's word salad.


    Because then you would not have to be reminded of the things you're saying?

    I couldn't interpret this paragraph in the context of the conversation. But if the universe is only an approximation, what's it approximating? I don't follow this line of argument.
     
    Last edited: Feb 10, 2018
  21. someguy1 Registered Senior Member

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    Was my loss determined at the moment of the big bang? Or was it random? Or is there some intermediate state, not yet accessible to our understanding, between determinism and randomness?
     
  22. Write4U Valued Senior Member

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    Probability.
    As long as the potential for something exists, it's just a matter of probability.

    Life on earth itself is a perfect example . During the BB the potential for life was created, but not as a deterministic imperative, but even within the chaotic randomness, the probability existed, given enough time and tries.

    And here we are, some 10 billion years later, at the outskirts of a galaxy. But there may well be other planets where life developed (evolved) long before us, and I am certain that there are or will be planets which will eventually produce life also.

    Life was not determined, nor was it random, it was probabilistic, which fortunately for us became fully explicated during the human epoch on earth after another 3 billion years, and after 2 trillion, quadrillion, quadrillion, quadrillion tries of chemical interactions, gradually evolving into greater complexity, such as forming the first self-replicating cell.
     
    Last edited: Feb 10, 2018
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  23. Michael 345 New year. PRESENT is 72 years oldl Valued Senior Member

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    god didn't want you to win?

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