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this post was submitted on 22 Jul 2023
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Asklemmy
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The Turing test was never meant to be a test of a machine's ability to think. It was meant to boil that question down into a question that can actually be answered, but the original question remains unanswered.
In my opinion, when general AI arrives it will not be an "open debate", the consequences will be dramatic, far-reaching and rapid.
I'm not even thinking of the Turing test, I'm thinking of the counter-example ones. Like asking how many eyes a ruler or desk has. Earlier GPTs would answer "one eye" or something, and it was used by the Chinese-room people as an example of why it was just a mimic. Now it correctly objects to the implicit assumption in the question.
You're right, "ChatGPT is currently our overlord" would be the strongest proof of intelligence. But absence of proof is not proof of absence. What is proof of absence, or a strong enough proof of presence is where the debate is.