While writing my article "Could Robots Take All Our Jobs?: A Philosophical Perspective" I came across a lot of people who claim (roughly) that human intelligence isn't Turing computable. At one point this led me to tweet something to the effect of, "where are the sophisticated AI critics who claim the problem of AI is NP-complete?" But that was just me being whimsical; I was mostly not-serious.
A couple times, though, I've heard people suggest something to the effect that maybe we will need quantum computing to do human-level AI, though so far I've never heard this from an academic, only interested amateurs (though ones with some real computing knowledge). Who else here has encountered this? Does anyone know of any academics who adopt this point of view? Answers to the latter question especially could be valuable for doing article version 2.0.
Edit: This very brief query may have given the impression that I'm more sympathetic to the "AI requires QC" idea than I actually am; see my response to gwern below.
There are a lot of things we simply don't know about the brain, and even less so about consciousness and intelligence in the human sense. In many ways, I don't think we even have the right words to talk about this. Last I checked scientists were not sure that neurons were the right level at which to understand how our brains think. That is, neurons have microtubule substructures several orders of magnitude smaller than the neurons themselves that may (or may not) have something significant to do with the encoding and processing of information in the brain. Thus it's conceivable that a whole-brain emulation at the level of individual neurons might be insufficient to produce human-type intelligence and consciousness. If so, we'd need quite a few more generations of Moore's law before we could expect to finish a whole brain emulation than we're currently estimating.
Furthermore the smaller structures would be more susceptible to quantum effects. Then again, maybe not. Roger Penrose and Stuart Hameroff have developed this as Orchestrated objective reduction theory. This theory has been hotly disputed; but so far I don't think it's been conclusively proven or disproven. However, it is experimentally testable and falsifiable. I suspect it's too early to claim definitively either that quantum effects either are or are not required for human type intelligence and consciousness; but more research will likely help us answer this question one way or the other.
I will say this: there is a lot of bad physics and philosophy out there that has been misled by bad popular descriptions of quantum mechanics and how the conscious observer collapses the wave function, and thus came to the conclusion that consciousness is intimately tied up with quantum mechanics. I feel safe ruling that much out. However it still seems possible that our consciousness and intelligence is routinely or occasionally susceptible to quantum randomness, depending on the scale at which it operates.
Even if Penrose's ideas about how human intelligence arises from quantum effects is all true, that still does not prove that all intelligence requires quantum randomness. If you want to answer that question, then the first thing you need to do is define what you mean by "intelligence". That's trickier than it sounds at first, but I think it can be usefully done. In fact, there are multiple possible definitions of intelligence useful for different purposes. For instance one is the ability to formulate plans that enable one to achieve a goal. Consciousness is a much thornier nut to crack. I don't know that anyone has a good handle on that yet.
Sure? No. Pretty confident? Yeah. The people who think microtubules and exotic quantum-gravitational effects are critical for intelligence/consciousness are a small minority of (usually) non-neuroscientists w... (read more)