Scarabin, on 2013-March-02, 21:22, said:
puzzled by Ken's "somewhat semantic", a bit like saying we communicate in prose?
I'll explain, as I often take this view on issues.
Can computers play a good game of chess? No doubt.
A good game of bridge? Not as good, for the moment, as chess but yes, quite good.
Can computers do a good job of assessing the value of a stock? Probably, but there are issues.
Should President Obama nominate a computer as ambassador to France? No, not a good idea I think.
We need all of the intelligence we can get in international relations. But I doubt we should turn to computers except as very useful adjuncts. The type of judgment required for a good ambassador certainly involves intelligence but I think it is the kind of intelligence that computers are not so good at. Of course you might say that the human track record here is not so great either, true enough. But with sense and experience, a person comes to feel "This person I can trust, that person I cannot". Or "This would be a good idea, but the time is not ripe for presenting it". Or etc.
So what I meant is that we could discuss, and maybe agree, maybe not, on what sort of things computers would be good at doing and what they would not be good at doing without ever using the word "intelligent". If, later, we could also agree on which tasks represent intelligence and which do not, that could be nice, but it is comparatively unimportant. Any disagreement would, perhaps, center on what is the correct usage of the word "intelligent". If we agree on what tasks computers can be trusted with and what tasks should be left to humans, then I call questions about the applicability of the word 'intelligent" a semantic issue.