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Poster/Conférence: Clé de citation BibTeX:  Frencha
French, R. M. (2000). The chinese room: just say “no!”. Proceedings of the 22nd Annual Cognitive Science Society Conference,
Ajoutée par: Sterenn Audo 2008-02-06 16:27:28
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Catégories: Full text, General
Auteurs: French
Collection: Proceedings of the 22nd Annual Cognitive Science Society Conference

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Résumé
It is time to view John Searle’s Chinese Room thought
experiment in a new light. The main focus of attention
has always been on showing what is wrong (or right)
with the argument, with the tacit assumption being that
somehow there could be such a Room. In this article I
argue that the debate should not focus on the question “If
a person in the Room answered all the questions in
perfect Chinese, while not understanding a word of
Chinese, what would the implications of this be for
strong AI?” Rather, the question should be, “Does the
very idea of such a Room and a person in the Room who
is able to answer questions in perfect Chinese while not
understanding any Chinese make any sense at all?” And
I believe that the answer, in parallel with recent
arguments that claim that it would be impossible for a
machine to pass the Turing Test unless it had
experienced the world as we humans have, is no.
Ajoutée par: Sterenn Audo

 
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Ajoutée par: Sterenn Audo
 

 
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