This post was rejected for the following reason(s):

  • Low Quality or 101-Level AI Content. There’ve been a lot of new users coming to LessWrong recently interested in AI. To keep the site’s quality high and ensure stuff posted is interesting to the site’s users, we’re currently only accepting posts that meets a pretty high bar. We look for good reasoning, making a new and interesting point, bringing new evidence, and/or building upon prior discussion. If you were rejected for this reason, possibly a good thing to do is read more existing material. The AI Intro Material wiki-tag is a good place, for example. You're welcome to post quotes in the latest AI Questions Open Thread.

In the hopes that simple analogies will help many understand state-of-the-art concepts. But it all starts when...

I give pseudo-conscious dogs cookies every time they sit and scold them every time they bark.


Then I got tired of that so I trained one smart pseudo-conscious dog to give other dogs cookies every time they sit and scold them every time they bark but ask me for feedback every time it doesn't know which is better.


But I hate it when it asks me, so I told another similarly smart pseudo-conscious dog to tell the other smart pseduo-conscious dog which is better by learning its judgement patterns.

 

...

[some time later]

...

 

I am not needed anymore. I am now what all humans strive to truly be: lazy.

 

But what happened in between?

New to LessWrong?

New Comment