Books
Scott Hartley

The Fuzzy and the Techie

  • petertalbot0328has quotedlast month
    The greatest danger . . . is not that it proves machines could be better versions of us, but that it tempts us to misunderstand ourselves as poorer versions of them.
  • petertalbot0328has quotedlast month
    machines are still incapable of true idea origination
  • petertalbot0328has quotedlast month
    the human mind teaches itself a great deal of what it knows.
  • petertalbot0328has quotedlast month
    the machine is entirely dependent on humans to create its internal logic, monitor it from a “control room,” and point it toward data to learn from
  • petertalbot0328has quotedlast month
    The machines prevailed in these other games due to sheer computing power and memory, not because of anything that could be characterized as approximating human intelligence
  • petertalbot0328has quotedlast month
    Technology’s promise is great, but it requires our liberal arts in equal measure, the fuzzy and the techie working together in pursuit of shared human goals.
  • petertalbot0328has quotedlast month
    There ought to be anthropologists, sociologists, and psychologists in every cutting-edge AI lab.
  • petertalbot0328has quotedlast month
    define routine tasks as those that are so well understood by humans that a specific set of instructions can be written as a computer program and executed by a machine.
  • petertalbot0328has quotedlast month
    routine tasks, whether they are of a cognitive or manual nature, are ripe for automation, while nonroutine manual tasks and abstract cognitive tasks are relatively safe from automation, at least for quite some time.
  • petertalbot0328has quotedlast month
    only 5 percent of whole jobs will be automated
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