Emergent intelligence in the Net?..
Cognitive and Biological psychologists (well, including me) have developed behavioral diagnostics of intelligence meta-cognition (the ability to monitor one's own thoughts; a step toward consciousness perhaps). These could be adapted for study of emergent intelligence in the net...and indeed doing so is the only way to get beyond the current interesting but necessarily inconclusive debate ("is too!" "is not!" "is too" " "might be!").
Proudly presented pointers to my own work in this area:
William James and the emerging philosophy of the World Wide Web The View from the Adaptive Landscape Are Species Intelligent? and early work on metacognition in dolphins, monkeys, and humans, reviewed and extended by David Smith et al here
Emergent intelligence in the Net?.
Phil Wainewright: Spontaneous intelligence and the Semantic Web. "the only way intelligence gets into a computer is as a result of humans putting it there."
My first reaction was to endorse that statement wholeheartedly. Upon thinking a bit more about it, I think I'd be more comfortable with a more restrictive statement such as "the Semantic Web will not by itself generate intelligence beyond what humans put into it".
I think spontaneous intelligence might pop up in other computer-related areas. For instance, as the Internet grows into a more and more biological-like system, we might begin to notice large-scale patterns of behavior emerge that were not planned by the designers. (Actually I'm not sure that this hasn't already happened, e.g. in router networks.) If some of these patterns turn out to have a recognizable function, they might be construed as evidence of intelligence. [Seb's Open Research]
[Jon Schull's Weblog]
Very good pointers.
7:13:33 PM
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