I'm finding it hard to imagine an agent that can get a diversity of difficult things done in a complex environment without forming goals and subgoals, which sounds to me like a requirement of general intelligence. AGI seems to require many-step plans and planning seems to require goals.
AGI seems to require many-step plans and planning seems to require goals.
Personally I try to see general intelligence purely as a potential. Why would any artificial agent tap its full potential, where does the incentive come from?
If you deprived a human infant of all its evolutionary drives (e.g. to avoid pain, seek nutrition, status and sex), would it just grow into an adult that tried to become rich or rule a country? No, it would have no incentive to do so. Even though such a "blank slate" would have the same potential for general intelli...
I have stopped understanding why these quotes are correct. Help!
More specifically, if you design an AI using "shallow insights" without an explicit goal-directed architecture - some program that "just happens" to make intelligent decisions that can be viewed by us as fulfilling certain goals - then it has no particular reason to stabilize its goals. Isn't that anthropomorphizing? We humans don't exhibit a lot of goal-directed behavior, but we do have a verbal concept of "goals", so the verbal phantom of "figuring out our true goals" sounds meaningful to us. But why would AIs behave the same way if they don't think verbally? It looks more likely to me that an AI that acts semi-haphazardly may well continue doing so even after amassing a lot of computing power. Or is there some more compelling argument that I'm missing?