Lagayascienza wrote: ↑November 13th, 2024, 8:53 pm
I am unable to post links here but these provide a taste of what I have been reading lately:
A Thousand Brains: A New Theory of Intelligence, Jeff Hawkins, March 2, 2021, Basic Books
“These Living Computers Are Made from Human Neurons”, Scientific American, 8 August, 2024
“How (and why) to think that the brain is literally a computer”, Front. Comput. Sci., 09 September 2022
“Neural tuning instantiates prior expectations in the human visual system”, Nature Communications, 1 Sept, 2023
“The computational power of the human brain”, Frontiers in Cellular Neuroscience, 7 August 2023
Maybe if you broadened your conception of "computation", which you seem to associate only with present day computers, you would not be so dogmatically impossiblist. What computers currently do is a very limited form of computation which I agree is never likely to achieve intelligence or consciousness. Neuroscientist and computer scientist, Jeff Hawkins, explains that what is needed is a better understanding of the brain and the processes which occur therein so that those processes can be emulated.
Thanks for the references. At least a couple of them we can discard right away, because they obviously subscribe to the computational theory of mind, so they can hardly represent a new research frontier.
About Jeff Hawkins's book, I've been going through some pages and I find it quite interesting, so I'll "eat" the entire book for sure and will propose to my book club. Perhaps because of a confirmation bias, since in some parts it looks as if he was repeating my stances on this thread. From Dawkins' foreword:
"Among the more important of the brain’s models are models of the body itself, coping, as they must, with how the body’s own movement changes our perspective on the world outside the prison wall of the skull. And this is relevant to the major preoccupation of the middle section of the book, the intelligence of machines."
"It is not that Hawkins underestimates the power of artificial intelligence and the robots of the future. On the contrary. But he thinks most present-day research is going about it the wrong way"
And from Hawkins himself:
"You might be surprised by my claim that the human brain remains a mystery. Every year, new brain-related discoveries are announced, new brain books are published [...] But if you ask neuroscientists, almost all of them would admit that we are still in the dark. We have learned a tremendous amount of knowledge and facts about the brain, but we have little understanding of how the whole thing works."
"In the forty years since Crick wrote his essay there have been many significant discoveries about the brain, several of which I will talk about later, but overall his observation is still true. How intelligence arises from cells in your head is still a profound mystery."
"In my interviews with MIT faculty, my proposal to create intelligent machines based on brain theory was rejected. I was told that the brain was just a messy computer and there was no point in studying it."
"The long-term goal of AI research is to create machines that exhibit human-like intelligence [...]The essential question today’s AI industry faces is: Are we currently on a path to creating truly intelligent AGI machines, or will we once again get stuck and enter another AI winter? The current wave of AI has attracted thousands of researchers and billions of dollars of investment. [...] When you are in the middle of a bubble, it is easy to get swept up in the enthusiasm and believe it will go on forever. History suggests we should be cautious.
I don’t know how long the current wave of AI will continue to grow. But I do know that deep learning does not put us on the path to creating truly intelligent machines. We can’t get to artificial general intelligence by doing more of what we are currently doing. We have to take a different approach."
"Nothing we call AI today is intelligent."
So, in general, from what I read so far, I welcome Hawkins' book, even though I disagree with some other things he says. But in the context of our current discussion, a few things must be pointed out:
First, this book does not represent current state of research in AI, nor a new research program that is making its way. It's a proposal to change the current path, which I solidly agree with, but it does not support the predictions that the current wave of AI research will eventually catch up and produce real intelligence.
Hawkins does not seem to support the computational theory of mind and he is firmly opposed to trying to get intelligence from modern computers (Universal Turing Machines). In that sense, Hawkins is no less an "impossibilist" and a "dogmatic" anticomputationalist than I supposedly am. He agrees with me in that AI currently dismisses the importance of the actual physics involved in intelligence. That's because they are only interested in the flow chart algorithms, in a hierarchical process, which does not actually exist in brains.
Secondly, it clearly states that it's proposing a theoretical framework, which is fine and should be welcomed, but that does not mean we have already started to understand the physics behind intelligence. Hawkins is quite open about this:
"I believe we discovered the framework that Crick wrote about, a framework that not only explains the basics of how the neocortex works but also gives rise to a new way to think about intelligence. We do not yet have a complete theory of the brain—far from it. Scientific fields typically start with a theoretical framework and only later do the details get worked out.
In the first part, I describe our theory of reference frames, which we call the Thousand Brains Theory. The theory is partly based on logical deduction."