Intelligence without Reason
From enfascination
Fantastic paper, a critical history of AI with proposed solutions (i.e. descriptions of Brook's work for the past thirty years). All his criticisms of AI echo the ones that I felt but couldn't articulate when I was learning the field by the tradition carried forward by Stuart Russell.
The best papers are the ones that inspire day dreaming, but of a directed sort. I've come out of it with many ideas, many of my own answers to his questions and many questions of the same questions. I'll go through my notes on this paper backwards.
Questions
- differential calculus: To the extent that problems I will encounter will be meaningfully represented as multidimensional searches, I will benefit from an understanding of tools that provide insight into how to think about multidimensional spaces, i.e. their rules of thumb. Should I take a course? Does one exist here?
- Similarly, should I take a search course?
Good Quotes
- "We only know that thought exists in biological systems through our own introspection. "