1992 | OriginalPaper | Chapter
Artificial Intelligence: A Hermeneutic Defense
Author : Thomas F. Gordon
Published in: Software Development and Reality Construction
Publisher: Springer Berlin Heidelberg
Included in: Professional Book Archive
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The field of Artificial Intelligence (AI), from its very beginnings in the 1950s, has been criticized for its name as well as its ambition. Most of the debate concerns the possibility of artificial intelligence and presumes there is indeed some thing which is intelligence; the only question has been whether or not artificial systems can be built which exhibit, or have, this thing. That is, the debate has remained for the most part within the rationalistic tradition. In this section, I would like to explore two alternative approaches to this issue. The first considers the consequences of viewing artificial intelligence as another metaphor for computing. That is, perhaps certain kinds of computing systems can be usefully viewed as being like intelligent beings in some significant way. An immediate consequence of this view, of course, would be a lowering of the aims and ambitions of the field. The claim that a system displays something like intelligence is surely much weaker than the claim that it is intelligent.