From “The Man Who Would Teach Machines to Think,” James Somers’ new Atlantic article about Douglas Hofstadter’s ongoing work in the field of AI which is meant to go many meters past Siri or Watson:
“For the past 30 years, most of them spent in an old house just northwest of the Indiana University campus, he and his graduate students have been picking up the slack: trying to figure out how our thinking works, by writing computer programs that think.
Their operating premise is simple: the mind is a very unusual piece of software, and the best way to understand how a piece of software works is to write it yourself. Computers are flexible enough to model the strange evolved convolutions of our thought, and yet responsive only to precise instructions. So if the endeavor succeeds, it will be a double victory: we will finally come to know the exact mechanics of our selves—and we’ll have made intelligent machines.”
Tags: Douglas Hofstadter, James Somers