Defining and Explorting the Intelligence Space
Abstract
Intelligence is a difficult concept to define, despite many attempts at doing so. Rather than trying to settle on a single definition, this article introduces a broad perspective on what intelligence is, by laying out a cascade of definitions that induces both a nested hierarchy of three levels of intelligence and a wider-ranging space that is built around them and approximations to them. Within this intelligence space, regions are identified that correspond to both natural -- most particularly, human -- intelligence and artificial intelligence (AI), along with the crossover notion of humanlike intelligence. These definitions are then exploited in early explorations of four more advanced, and likely more controversial, topics: the singularity, generative AI, ethics, and intellectual property.
Keywords
Cite
@article{arxiv.2306.06499,
title = {Defining and Explorting the Intelligence Space},
author = {Paul S. Rosenbloom},
journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2306.06499},
year = {2023}
}
Comments
May ultimately appear as a journal article and/or a book chapter