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We already have an example of general intelligence, and it doesn't look like AI.
There's no question that AI systems have accomplished some impressive feats, mastering games, writing text, and generating convincing images and video. That's gotten some people talking about the possibility that we're on the cusp of AGI, or artificial general intelligence. While some of this is marketing fanfare, enough people in the field are taking the idea seriously that it warrants a closer look.
Many arguments come down to the question of how AGI is defined, which people in the field can't seem to agree upon. This contributes to estimates of its advent that range from "it's practically here" to "we'll never achieve it." Given that range, it's impossible to provide any sort of informed perspective on how close we are.
But we do have an existing example of AGI without the "A"—the intelligence provided by the animal brain, particularly the human one. And one thing is clear: The systems being touted as evidence that AGI is just around the corner do not work at all like the brain does. That may not be a fatal flaw, or even a flaw at all. It's entirely possible that there's more than one way to reach intelligence, depending on how it's defined. But at least some of the differences are likely to be functionally significant, and the fact that AI is taking a very different route from the one working example we have is likely to be meaningful.
With all that in mind, let's look at some of the things the brain does that current AI systems can't.

Defining AGI might help

Neurons vs. artificial neurons

The brain isn’t monolithic

The brain is constantly training

Déjà vu

Facing limits

52 sats \ 0 replies \ @freetx 23h
Steps needed.
  1. Figure out how brain works
  2. Figure out what consciousness is (without this step, it may all be pointless)
If Penrose is correct, and the brain is a quantum antenna that tunes into "consciousness waves", then it actually may be possible that we get there.
A minimal quantum computer chip to run the antennas that tunes into consciousness waves connected with LLM models....might more or less be what GI actually is....
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I don't think we'll ever be able to answer questions like "what is consciousness" from a purely naturalistic lens
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Defining AGI might help
Yeah this is why you AI people sound so insane
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