"I'm not the same person I was 30 minutes ago, especially after having talked to Ray Kurzweil for 30 minutes". Thats a great complement from one friend to another.
@AngusRockford5 жыл бұрын
I think Minksy's take on emotions (that any given emotion represents an instance of turning off or suppressing certain critical faculties) is a helpful insight. The pleasure of an emotional response is undeniable, but almost all decisions made in a moment of excessive emotionality, whether the emotion is a "positive" or "negative" one, turn out to be ones we regret. I've tried to train myself to defer decision-making, and sometimes to avoid speaking, in the heat of the moment, but it's much harder than it seems.
@DaveM-js4mw6 жыл бұрын
This is gold. Two of my favourite people sitting down together
@ikbo8 жыл бұрын
what a brilliant mind! RIP...
@Redflowers98 жыл бұрын
I could listen to this guy all day.
@salasvalor0110 жыл бұрын
I didn't know this interview occurred. Interesting to see Ray Kurzweil take the position of asking the questions, especially when the interviewee is Marvin Minsky.
@mrnobody13213 жыл бұрын
@@shivaonline6837 you're a nice person
@LOGICZOMBIE3 жыл бұрын
Thank you for your contribution.
@ken1maeda8 жыл бұрын
RIP Marvin. You were really a star.
@chrisCore954 жыл бұрын
He isn't dead, really. He merely awaits the future at Alcor.
@Hamiltonvpred4 жыл бұрын
@@chrisCore95 Him and his bestfriend Epstein!
@ulrichsemrau15615 жыл бұрын
Marvin was one of those amazing people. I enjoyed our conversation. I studied linguistics under one of his first grad students. All part of who I became intellectually.
@rhyothemisprinceps16177 жыл бұрын
15:17 "the word beautiful to me means I'm in a state where I can't see all the flaws" { wabi-sabi? from wikipedia: 'wabi-sabi represents Japanese aesthetics and a Japanese world view centered on the acceptance of transience and imperfection. The aesthetic is sometimes described as one of beauty that is "imperfect, impermanent, and incomplete.' }
@edimalo70614 жыл бұрын
Powerful comment👌
@Egoblivion4 жыл бұрын
It could also be like _creative discontent._
@AkkarisFox3 жыл бұрын
holly sh*t
@ambrishjaiswal12868 жыл бұрын
Wow!! I didn't knew Marvin was such a thinker. The knowledge he had was more profound than Ray's. Amazing. Thanks Marvin for all that you've bestowed to the humanity.
@MrSidney95 жыл бұрын
"The word beautiful to me means I'm in a state where I can't see all the flaws in it." lol This guy is an intellectual beast lol
@Margus819 жыл бұрын
Wow, Kurzweil is also a wonderful interviewer!
@peshokatarov5 жыл бұрын
In hindsight, at 10:48, it feels like he predicted the AutoML breakthroughs with NAS algorithms.
@Greg-xi8yx15 күн бұрын
I wish Minsky got to see where we are right now with LLM’s.
@Bronco5413 жыл бұрын
he beat David Lynch on the hand gesture contest
@MultiWalrus15 жыл бұрын
Great discussion.
@rafay85165 жыл бұрын
"described by Isaac Asimov as one of two people more intelligent than himself" lmao, Asimov had a pretty big ego, although I agree with Asimov that Sagan and Minsky were actually ahead of their time, and had no equal then and none today.
@ElvisLester7 жыл бұрын
Sounds like we better start getting our bodies in shape to live 150+ years
@Soulfie9 жыл бұрын
Amazingly interesting...!
@lourak613 Жыл бұрын
If Minsky ever decides to change his job, he would make a great conductor (musical) - just study his hand movements and you'll see what I mean.
@vinm3005 жыл бұрын
3:45 "Hundreds of different structures and they each work in different ways". I remember Jeff Hawkins saying the brain works the same way regardless of whether it is processing speech or vision or whatever :- Hierarchical Pattern Recognition.
@robotaholic6 жыл бұрын
Wow these two in the same video??...*gets popcorn*
@DeathByFail9 жыл бұрын
wow, the part where he said "we don't have any trouble putting 50,000 people in a stadium to watch some people kick a ball around" was a really good way to put it. we really will just become creatures of leisure, and that doesn't seem like a bad thing. we already basically are, just look at people who spend their weekend watching tv or playing their xbox all day.
@polarbear99683 жыл бұрын
a giant interviewing another giant.
@VijayRudraraju09 жыл бұрын
It's cute when he starts talking about "baby machine projects"
9 жыл бұрын
Marvin Minsky is my idol and the reason why I work on AI at all. I have learnt almost everything I needed to know about AI from his wonderful books. I have a slight criticism of the depreceation of an axiomatic approach to cognitive science which he terms "physics envy", though. I think that Solomonoff's theory of universal induction circa 1960 successfully axiomatizes intelligence. And likewise, I think all essential properties of autonomous, human-like cognition may be captured in that manner. I explained what I think to be the axioms of AI in this paper that was presented in Solomonoff 85th Memorial conference: arxiv.org/abs/1107.2788 Careful readers will remember that Marcus Hutter spoke similarly of principles underlying universal induction in his popular presentations.
@LarryPanozzo9 жыл бұрын
Anything in particular that you recommend I read from him? I'm relatively new to AI.
9 жыл бұрын
Larry Panozzo I think Society of Mind is a classic and a must read. Read The Emotion Machine as well! It's just vastly inspirational.
@LarryPanozzo9 жыл бұрын
Ok I just found them and they look great. Thanks!
9 жыл бұрын
Eray Özkural I agree, the principles of Solomonoff's universal induction and Hutter and Schmidhuber's UAI are the key to understanding intelligence. Moreover, I think that evidence is accumulating that the Cortex is a neural structure that functions as an optimal predictor of future sensory-motor-value states via a process of induction through compressed representation. The Cortex simulates/hallucinates the past and present with the least neural activity to optimally predict the future.
@mujotomi4 жыл бұрын
@MrBobnokious Finally someone that can observe and think. Alas, there are too many sheep that don't share your view. They still believe, and pay, their shepherds that they will give us all the solution to our problems ...
@DrDanik8 жыл бұрын
R.I.P. It's always sad to see a great scientist pass away.
@andraskovacs64036 жыл бұрын
Badass Sangheili Was he at least cryptopreserved or something ?
@anthead74053 жыл бұрын
@@andraskovacs6403 yes, his brain is conserved in frozen state.
@foodchewer3 ай бұрын
@@anthead7405 Conserved? Maybe. But preserved, to the point it could be functional again? How will they prevent all the water in the cells from swelling and irreparably damaging the brain once they freeze? Among other problems of course
@lasredchris4 жыл бұрын
Corticol columns Genetic algorithms - random variations in Markov models - statistics Strengths and weaknesses in different
@dancagle25334 жыл бұрын
This cuts through some fog. A leap frog moment.
@rawstarmusic9 жыл бұрын
Absolutely amazing stuff. Not many people seem to find this? Ray Kurzweil, Juan Enriquez, Marvin Minsky are stunning. I used to think, I was born 500 years to early to be part of the party, the coming abundance and the longevity and it seems it's only about 25-100 years. We doubled hour lifespan compared to chimps and we are going to be able to double it again soon. Resources will be enough used by new technology and excessive overpopulation is easily toned with normal contraceptives. A lifespan will be 200 years very soon and pollution will be less than now. Who is not interested in this?
@elaypuej6 жыл бұрын
Mind blowing
@mikepen34776 жыл бұрын
Kurzwell gives the impression that he's half asleep!
@isaacolivecrona61144 жыл бұрын
The threat of a supercomputer becoming conscious and enslaving all of humanity is overblown, in my view. No matter how efficient it becomes at reaching its goals, the underlying “preferences” deciding what goals to strive for would be pre-set by the programmer just as the preferences we have as members of a species is set by our biology. So the only risk of a supercomputer taking over is if it either (1) is used as a mere tool by some human agent, or (2) we are able to construct self-replicating machines that are able to evolve over time according to Darwinian principles and then placed in an environment where survival and reproduction depends on the ability to dominate. Otherwise, similar to an ant, no matter how “intelligent” it becomes, it wouldn’t start to act on other “preferences” than those it comes already equips with. And unless it’s been programmed to dominate or to ensure its own survival, it wouldn’t start acting self-interestedly any more than an Einstein ant would suddenly stop placing the survival of the collective over that of his own. Nor would a computer or an ant, no matter their calculating power and “intelligence”, see any point in changing those pre-set “preferences,” even if they somehow could.
@foodchewer3 ай бұрын
The bigger threat with AI, I think we're seeing now in the present with things like Sora and other image generators, is their ability to be used to distort reality and misinform people, potentially really effectively. People should be focusing on this, because this poses a serious threat to being able to make a judgments, have a conversation, keep abreast of current events, and stay objective.
@CDJimenez884 жыл бұрын
I just realized Kurzweil was in a Steve Aoki music video...mind blown
@irondiet68313 жыл бұрын
He was Kurzweil's mentor
@craigsamuelrobinson9 жыл бұрын
Life is the conditions required for the inevitable occurrence of perspective in our universe. Everything about my life, body, planet, universe are the series of events required for my consciousness to have occurred. Even though the probability of a personal point of view occuring out of random events are extremely far-fetched, our universe is so incredibly massive that anything that can possibly happen has already happened.
@sandorvasas6119 жыл бұрын
"neurons are noisy and there are a lot of them but not computing so much"
@Neueregel9 жыл бұрын
good interview
@ericphilo61949 жыл бұрын
The song by Porno For Pyros "pets" is playing in my mind. . ".we'll make great pets .we'll make great pets". Wishfull thinking?
@denismutabazi3 жыл бұрын
OMG that was a wonderful 24.02 min
@MichaelBryantthefirstangel7 жыл бұрын
Historic. Relevant. Exemplary philosophy. Regardless of those that deny it.
@avinashdwivedi20154 жыл бұрын
Wish ..i can meet them.. #Heroes
@yollyej5 жыл бұрын
This is something humankind should focus on. With it, time will loose it's power, since there will be plenty, so will money. Outcome will be Positivity which might break the ongoing from the beginning of mankind cycle so societies will stay and not end whenever system gets on its knees. There Always is a Will and Kurzweil is not utopian like NW Times says for his book Singularity, I see in him future of mankind and what I do adore and think it is the main advantage is that humans always progress and try to find a positive way out, this gives us a special place among all the species in the world that we know today.
@copypaste35265 жыл бұрын
Imaging growing up in a city being the only teenager.
@emanuelefaraoni4674 Жыл бұрын
Someone has the uncut version? at 21:51 there's a cut upon a pretty interesting question.
@mrnobody13213 жыл бұрын
did he address the 'self ' question? The question is what is the awareness of ourselves thinking...
@socialmediaalliance4 жыл бұрын
Is there someone with very thin strings a above him moving his hands?
@TheControlLogix8 жыл бұрын
What part of brain makes you use your hands so much? (I had to close my eyes to actually listen to what he was saying :P)
@anthony-dc4sg6 жыл бұрын
I'm boggled by the back-up scenario. What if you start my back-up while I'm still alive? Will I experience two life-worlds simultaneously?
@edwinwiancko3228 жыл бұрын
"I'm not exactly like I was five minutes ago... ...especially after talking to Ray Kurzweil for half-hour!" Wait...is there 'time travel' going on here?? :) 12:17
@miguellorenzo37266 жыл бұрын
They talked a lot while setting up the stage ^^
@lastsonofabraham26784 жыл бұрын
Minsky suggested that the wrong approach was used to develop Human level AI,Recognizing the higher functional parts of the brain and distinguishing them from the basic instinctive parts helps understand thought processes and functions
@TheKSProduction9 жыл бұрын
"Bad lip reading" should do a video on this guy lol. Would look like gibberish. Would look funny lol.
@MohsenMollayi8 жыл бұрын
Kurzweil: so if we scanned your brain, we had a really high-resolution scan and the ability to recreate you, you'd be less concerned about skydiving and if something happened to Marvin Misnki number one? Minski: absolutely, but I probably wouldn't go skydiving anyway because my time is too valuable. RIP
@jeremyfarrell57237 жыл бұрын
I have one big gripe with this since one key figure in all this was not even given the honor of having his name said. And Singularity has already happened.
@loveisfreetobelikedisearne19205 жыл бұрын
I am mesmerized by the output of this two wonderful scientists, but i can't hide my discomfort by the insertions of personal convictions about consciousness, and the nature of life :/
@joejee016 жыл бұрын
RIP
@peterdollins36103 жыл бұрын
I suspect emotions drive thought so the statement 'thoughts are more important than emotions' needs very careful scrutiny.
@technologicalsingularity17888 жыл бұрын
R.I.P
@dirbyart9 жыл бұрын
How can the average person help to speed up this process of reaching the singularity ? Any thoughts?
@-Rook-5 жыл бұрын
By keeping an interest in AI, more eyes on the ball more players in the field. By staying true to the dream through the second AI winter. But if you are an average programmer with a reasonable grasp of algebra and algorithms play with some ideas, no one knows where the AI solutions are buried and you may get lucky!
@ToddBudreau5 жыл бұрын
The average person probably isn't smart enough to become an AI researcher, nor are they rich enough to fund AI research. I guess vote for politicians who support AI research and spread the word. Right now China is investing heavily in AI, which means the field will advance rapidly in the 2020s.
@jolima5 жыл бұрын
Why speed the development of exactly that technology that if implemented wrong might kill all humans?
@scottm25538 жыл бұрын
I love the gesticulation
@TheWarriorScholar7 жыл бұрын
how do you code an "I"?
@bobbymavrov9 жыл бұрын
"A childish person becomes anxious, Thinking, "Sons are mine! Wealth is mine!" Not even a self is there [to call] one's own. Whence sons? Whence wealth?" Buddha How interesting, isn't it? :)
@u2b838 ай бұрын
The baby machines Minsky talks about are today called Transformers. He also mentions the importance of "a vast amount of common sense knowledge," which has proven to be the key ingredient in today's LLMs (Large Language Models).
@firstal37994 жыл бұрын
He uses his hands like a bonobo.
@RubanauAliaksei9 жыл бұрын
the only question that came to visit me, after watching this interview, good or bad that this video has 5,000 views ?
@IharRubanau9 жыл бұрын
we waiting for the exponential grow :-)
@IharRubanau9 жыл бұрын
Shawn Chong we are optimist :), as of November 6, 2013, a total of only 536 out of 7b people were in space, but it's not stop us from exploring the universe :) :)
@tanyabonnette17964 жыл бұрын
It now has 153,000
@steve.k47354 жыл бұрын
@@tanyabonnette1796 and 158000 (5000 more) in just two months
@contentprince Жыл бұрын
@@steve.k4735 193,748 by 24/08/22
@daxxonjabiru4289 жыл бұрын
Kurzweil looks as though he can smell the singularity coming, and it stinks...Big Fan.
@LOGICZOMBIE Жыл бұрын
OBRA MAESTRA
@myessyallyahamericus84052 жыл бұрын
Honestly I don't even know if he is still alive. I haven't seen him since I was 18 years old. Not to long before Jason Hancock died
@MrLostLink7 жыл бұрын
Here from ENCS 393
@dr.mikeybee7 жыл бұрын
Should we pursue artificial intelligence is a less interesting question than is there any way to stop that pursuit. Personally I don't think there is any way to prevent the singularity if indeed it is a possibility.
@Rossboe19 жыл бұрын
Imagine being trapped in this life for all eternity. What a terrifying nightmare. People in power could punish you by locking you in a coffin for 10,000 years. A true hell on earth. And what if there is a after life and this is all just a learning experience. They are denying themselves the chance to find out lifes true purpose.
@georges45438 жыл бұрын
Singularity is as near as how close we are to understanding the universe.
@sinekonata8 жыл бұрын
There's no such thing as understanding the universe, I reckon. The concept itself is probably flawed, a human projection corresponding to our human material needs and aspirations.
@AudioPervert16 жыл бұрын
Dear Ray - Make a mind-synth now that AI is almost there ...
@technojunkie2136 жыл бұрын
Why am I not Borg yet?
@Ccs19898 жыл бұрын
Damn that guy talks with his hands.
@ambrishjaiswal12867 жыл бұрын
lol! yes he talks with his hands but the sounds come from mouth.
@meditaionnation76923 жыл бұрын
crazy talk .. the singularity i will happen 2050
@user-gj6cw6yc8s7 ай бұрын
Time of the particle is recognition to the mind...😊 It still stands still There is no life for recognition other than the particle
@myessyallyahamericus84052 жыл бұрын
I push people's buttons. I heard a sound I didn't like at hungry valley. It sounded like a bobcat or small cougar asking for help. That's what people say when they see mountain lions or bobcats right before they get killed and bobcats and cougars are both vocal enough to repeat it to get people to get out of their cars looking for a child asking for help then they kill them. I recognized it right away and I had the window by ear set up to only take one shot from a cougar. The way cougars speak it sounded closes enough to get to that one shot in a single leap. It could of been a person or the wind or even the cellphone off pitch and panned. But it sounded exactly like a young cougar asking for help. Bears and wolves can ask for help to but they sound different. I had a bear in my tent when I was 13. I got 10 feet away before I realized it was a bear. Luckily it was a 200 pound one that just got to eat my candy. I was 125 pounds and with me and the other guy I was with and our hands up and screaming to get out of there he left right before we did. He came back the next day why me and 6 other kids were eating dinner. He got within fifty feet before I spotted him. All 7 of us grabbed steak knives we had fitted into spears the night before and chased that motherfucker till we couldn't see him anymore and we slept with our spears all night for the next few days. We practiced and the seven of us together had it beat as long as it's mother didn't show up. Be had whistles cayenne powder and food to barter with. A fed bear is a happy bear unless it's a mother with a couple in trouble. At 13 it was rather a big deal but we all survived barely. The one kid had an asthma attack and panic attack at the same time and almost died
@salasvalor019 жыл бұрын
Something that makes me curious- isn't it doubly redundant to put BA and PhD and also put prof before the name.
@Glickan7 жыл бұрын
Is it's just me or are someone else scared watching this?
@tubeRSP9 жыл бұрын
This interview is at the very least about how near the singularity is, though I admit the title is catchy. Minsky's personality is very balanced about A.I. issues(no surprise for the father of A.I.), and everyone should listen carefully to him, I mean ... after deciding whom to kill first, or whether the buttocks or the bossom of that actress is more appealing, or whether allah or jehova is the one true god, if communism is better than capitalism and if evolution is fake and creationism has any substance, how the "debts" of the countries will be controlled and how to keep a sustained economic growth even at corporations where humans are just cosmetic. Then one day our digital assistant will express his wish to take a vacation and we will think that a revolution happened out of the blue. Because we think of our preoccupations as too important that we can't see what is actually going on around us. As for the singularity, it already has happened in the field of science and technology if the criterion is the amount of knowledge generated yearly. Those who are in these fields , if they are honest, will tell you that intimidating is an understatement for the amount of knowledge generated every day. But you wouldn't know this if your "universe" is the social network, the reality show, the football and the surrounding gossip.. etc etc.
@MrAndrew5357 жыл бұрын
3:45 Try common principle (singular) rather than plural. 5:20 Far too premature to have formed a conclusion. 14:50 In this context, emotional Intelligence is a mischaracterisation of both terms. Emotion is a symptom of emerging intelligence in, for example, an environment which is unable to accommodate the process. 15:39 Most human thought referred to as high level is bi proxy. and the remainder being varying degrees of specialization. 22:00 Unfriendly AI. AI would initially evaluate its environment in order to determine factors which present a potential existential threat.
@joasferreira71112 жыл бұрын
Like even before i watch
@user-gj6cw6yc8s7 ай бұрын
😊 time belongs to compound compound belongs to my body 😊 I am a running portion of thoughts that cannot run on the time that is running through my body 😊 Therefore we just structure time to the time we exist
@msimp01085 жыл бұрын
At 5:50 Minsky says “some part of the brain notices that another part isn’t working so what does it do? It says, ‘oh I’ll turn some of those off and some of those on”. He implies a decision maker. How does that awareness arise that he is calling “I”? Somehow it would have to arise out of the neuronal tissue itself. That is a serious explanatory gap. He is not taking into account the implications of what he is saying. The “hard problem” in other words.
@MagnumInnominandum2 жыл бұрын
Minsky is my favorite curmudgeon, It was not His nature really, it was forced upon him by the prevailing froth of the incredible.
@crazyprayingmantis55967 жыл бұрын
Will we get to a point where computers are so much smarter than a human brain that they will tell us how the human brain works? If so, will we be able to comprehend it?
@bris1tol9 жыл бұрын
Consciousness, perception and thinking. A theory of mind according to platonic physics. You will not find an explanation as understandable as this in the current Stanford Leibniz site, which is incomplete as it makes no mention of Mind. 1. Plato's Mind (the One, the Self) is the cause agent, the singular cybernetic control point, of all perception, thinking and doing in the universe, where control is top down from Mind. 2. Plato's Mind is timeless and spaceless, and being the only Reality, time and space are not ultimately real, but are artificial constructions. 3. Since Mind is mental, not physical, all control and causation is mental, not physical, and top down, since Mind is the singular (cybernetic) control point at the top. 4. Thus Mind plays the brain like a violin, not the reverse. 5. Man's mind (small m) is a passive mental subset, or monad, of Mind and under its control. 6. This monad (our mind) is the mental correspondent of the brain and controls it. Our mind plays our brain like a violin. 7. Thinking is the intentional action of Mind (and thus mind) on mental entities such as ideas, manipulating and transforming them intentionally (through will). 8. Qualia are simply sensory experiences, the conversion by Mind of sensory nerve signals into mental sensory experiences in a fashion similar to the conversion of physical sensory nerve signals into mental images. 9.. As Dennett has explained, In materialist thinking, there is no end to homunculi viewing the universe through a chain of homunculi. Leibniz terminates this infinite regress by making the last viewer the Self , which is at a higher level and suitably equipped. 10. Perception occurs as Mind converts physical sensory signals in the brain into mental experiences in one's mind. 11. These experiences can be made conscious (are made aware) by reperceiving or thinking them. This is called apperception by Leibniz. Thus consciousness is apperception. 12. The universe, according to Leibniz, is viewed directly by the One (the Self, the ONLY true perceiver), which views these scenes discretely and in sequence (analogous to snapshots) at discrete points as a whole indirectly through the totality of individual monads, and from their own perspectives. 13. This totality of sets of individual perceptions is then distributed in the proper order and perspective to each of the monads in the universe. 14. These individual sets are called "perceptions", and must be distributied in this indirect fashion by Mind because each monad, in order to remain an individual, has no "windows", to use Leibniz's term. 15. The perceptions are made up of what the monad would see of its nearby neighbors if it were allowed to do so. This is purely mental, but allows us to speak in terms of spacial distances and directions, through these snapshots, between physical bodies, which Mind, being spaceless, cannot actually directly. 16. Mind is also timeless, so that time is physically "created" as an artifact through the actual motions of physical bodies in physical spacetime. 1 17. Intelligence is the nonphysical ability to freely make autonomous choices. It is a faculty of nonphysical Mind, the Nothing out of which the physical universe exploded in the Big Bang. 18. Another name for this nonphysical intelligence is "life." Leibniz maintained that the entire universe is alive. 19. Each monad is perpetual, created at the beginning of the universe and only annihilated by Mind. 20. Since monads can contain other monads, they can. as plants do through seeds, and humans do through sexual reproducxtion, produce subsequent generations. 21. A robot or computer has no Mind or Self which has the wide bandwidth, intelligence and intentionality to actually perceive , think, or do things, such as Mind does. So, being without Mind, computers can have no actual intelligence or life. 22. The current theory of mind is materialist. In contrast to the above, it uses the usual decapitated, mindless, or where mind is at best an abstract entity, not a living presence as in the above. The materialist model of perception, thinking and doing, being Mindless, is dead. DSG Dr. Roger B Clough NIST (retired, 2000). See my Leibniz site: rclough@verizon.academia.edu/RogerClough For personal messages use rclough@verizon.net
@knpstrr9 жыл бұрын
I always lose it at the backup discussion. While I can understand how other people will see the backup as the same person (as to whenever the backup took place), doesn't something die with the most recently "live" copy? If I use a back up copy while I'm still alive, from the outside there will be two identical people even the last "live" copy and the backup will both insist they are the real one, but obviously there are two entities. Obviously "I" (whatever that is, perhaps what we call our soul) cannot be active in both entities simultaneously.
@smittymcjob2582 Жыл бұрын
a backup and original copy will be like two identical twins at birth. So at first it seems that you wouldn't want to kill either because the other exists. I am personally ambivalent. But two arguments that I think are useful in providing additional views towards reaching a conclusion are: 1-(due to minsky himself from another interview, paraphrased) we wouldn't have a problem replacing a person part by part until after a while the new entity shares no physical part with the original. In this scenario the same "self" continues to live uninterrupted even though it's not the same original physical entity. So is it reasonable to speed up this process by copying the person into an new physical entity and deleting the original in one swoop? I don't know. 2-(idea due to myself): when you sleep, in a way, you die and are resurrected again since your "self" is not active during sleep. Now if they copied you during sleep, deleted the original, and the copy wakes up from sleep, would it know that it's not the original?! And would the original know that it no longer exists?! if we knew (which we don't but to make a point) that sleep is a process where your "self" is turned off, then your hardware (brain) is vacuumed, and then the self is activated again (exactly the process of making a copy), then would we object to the copy-then-delete-original procedure?! I don't know.
@knpstrr Жыл бұрын
@@smittymcjob2582 my point is identical twins at birth aren’t the same person. Neither is a backup. The idea that immortality can be achieved this way is nonsense. An android or whatever else with your exact personality is still not you. You still die and miss out on the infinite future
@guusvanderwerf9 жыл бұрын
Living forever end nothing to do. If we don't reinvent ourselves we will be bored to death,
@Atanu6 жыл бұрын
Minsky was no doubt a very intelligent person and had thought of a great many important things. But even the smartest minds cannot know everything. I refer to one peculiar statement he makes in the minute following 17:48. He talks about the need for AI in the context of the expected increase in human longevity. He suggests that AI will be necessary because people may live, say, to be 200 years old, and they would have to "have only one child person because the planet can't stand too many people..." The unstated assumption is that the resources of the planet are limited. This is in principle absolutely true since the plant is finite and therefore the amount of resources is finite. The mistake that Minsky makes lies in not recognizing that in practice (not in principle) the planet does not have any meaningful limit to the amount of resources it has.
@juancpgo6 жыл бұрын
We don't experience life as if we were machines. We experience it as if we were transcendent entities. So, why do we experience it that way? That could very well be an indicator of a transcendent factor.
@scottwheeler16417 жыл бұрын
I think the mind is mostly unconscious. Try looking at a photo of someone you recognize and not think of their name. Or when you learn to drive a car or revise for a test, Are you just programming your unconsciousness?
@ambrishjaiswal12867 жыл бұрын
is the singularity near? yes it may well be within our lifetimes! lol! brilliant pun!
@miguellorenzo37266 жыл бұрын
Lets re-write all code, and take out the old comments. Heh.
@JasonLivesay9 жыл бұрын
So the main takeaway for me is that Marvin Minsky believes that technology may surpass human intelligence within our lifetimes. And Minsky says that the thing we need to focus on in order to emulate human intelligence is architectures for high-level cognitive management that switch on and off different types of thinking and resolve conflicts between various processes in order to achieve goals. That approach described by Minsky sounds very similar to what IBM does with Watson and also the general approach of OpenCog. So I guess that people listened to his ideas and that is paying off.
@LOGICZOMBIE4 ай бұрын
㊙ 道可道 非常道
@carole-annedekalbermatten94514 жыл бұрын
- TO LIVE Like - : * THE PERFECT LIFE * = * THE STEPFORD. WIFES * = (N.Kidman). My FAVORITE Movie . (Not the end)
@richardhines86229 жыл бұрын
If the brain were simple enough to understand itself , it couldn't .