Xref: utzoo talk.philosophy.misc:3910 comp.ai:6575 Path: utzoo!attcan!uunet!zephyr.ens.tek.com!tektronix!percy!parsely!psueea!eecs!erich From: erich@eecs.cs.pdx.edu (Erich Boleyn) Newsgroups: talk.philosophy.misc,comp.ai Subject: Re: Understanding is not a function of behaviour Keywords: New Argument, Understanding Message-ID: <2645@psueea.UUCP> Date: 11 Apr 90 05:00:38 GMT References: <1990Apr10.130006.6780@maths.tcd.ie> Sender: news@psueea.UUCP Reply-To: erich@cs.pdx.edu (Erich Boleyn) Organization: Portland State University, Portland, OR Lines: 77 In article <1990Apr10.130006.6780@maths.tcd.ie> ftoomey@maths.tcd.ie (Fergal Toomey) writes: ... >The discussion is about whether or not understanding can be inferred >from behaviour, ie. if I win a lot of chess games, do I neccessarily >understand chess? I instinctively feel that behaviour does not imply >understanding, mainly because of the many unfortunate conclusions this >position leads you to. For example, a plane can fly, I cannot. Does >this mean that a plane understands aerodynamics better than I do? >I would say that, certainly, the plane obeys the laws of aerodynamics >in a way in which I do not. Similarly, a simple chess program obeys certain >rules of thumb when formulating a strategy, but this does not mean that >it understands those rules anymore than an aeroplane understands >aerodynamics. > >Now, as human beings, we understand things, I think we can all agree >on that. Therefore, part of out behaviour, which may or may not be >apparent to an observer (my opponents would say that it is) is to >understand. Whether or not this particular part of our behaviour is >observable by an outsider, it is certainly observable to us ourselves. >Hence there is no doubt that understanding is a part of human >behaviour. > >In fact, on the whole, we succeed quite well in understanding many >different things. Therefore, if you believe that understanding is >implied by behaviour, then you must believe that we humans understand >how to understand, in the same way that a chess playing computer >understands how to play chess. But this isn't true. We do not >understand how to understand. If we did, the problem of the CR >would never have arisen, and AI would have been finished off years >ago. Chess would be no problem, Gary Kasparov could have written >a book explaining how to understand chess, and we'd all be grandmasters. > >So if we assume from our behaviour that we can understand how to >understand, then we are faced with the contradiction that, from our >behaviour, it is clear that we do not understand how to understand. >So we must reject our hypothesis, and state that behaviour does not >neccessarily imply understanding. Nicely put, but I feel that there is something missing here. For most models of AI, we use various aspects of human intelligence (and/or behavior, as the case may be) as our goals to see if our models achieve the same thing. Have you ever wondered why we ask if someone REALLY understands a problem? In an intiutive sense, we know that understanding involves being able to do more than paraphrase, but to actually tranform your knowledge (through anology, or other such) into other forms, or to create realationships that do not exist explicitly in the knowledge (but may exist implicitly). With human experts we don't tend to question because we assume that someone else has done the checking to see if they understand (otherwise they would not be considered an expert), and even then, if someone does not seem able to perform adequately under varying conditions, we take a closer look into their competence. (Posted a version of this just before, but am adding on...) I feel that understanding is not the process, and as such am agreeing with Fergal, but also feel that to have understanding (in any way that we can recognize) there must be an assimilation with the ability to transform the knowledge and to relate the transformed knowledge to other knowledge. This is the crucial ability that allows chess masters to do so well, that they can tansform strategies and amend their strategies in-line (this would seem to mean that the rules must be dynamic, but that would be required to have what we call intelligence in the first place), i.e. the tasks that humans accomplish can in some cases be reduced to a nice set of rules (and do in some cases, as experts find processes that makes their work easier), but the "understanding" part is the ability to re-formulate the rules when an inefficiency or incorrect result develops. This could be accomplished by rules that change the rules, etc. but this is pretty much just (in the end) trying to make an intelligent system for "understanding" your problem and solving it. Erich ___--Erich S. Boleyn--___ CSNET/INTERNET: erich@cs.pdx.edu {Portland State University} ARPANET: erich%cs.pdx.edu@relay.cs.net "A year spent in BITNET: a0eb@psuorvm.bitnet artificial intelligence is enough to make one believe in God"