>"large scale statistical knowledge assimilation" as well, aka learning
No, experimentation is an act on the world to set its state and then measure it. That's what learning involves.
These machines do not act on the world, they just capture correlations.
In this sense, machines are maximally schizophrenic. They answer "yes" to "is there a cat on the matt?" not because there is one, but because "yes" was what they heard most often.
Producing models of correlations in half-baked measures of human activity has nothing to do with learning. And everything to do with a magic light box that fools dumb apes.
No, experimentation is an act on the world to set its state and then measure it. That's what learning involves.
These machines do not act on the world, they just capture correlations.
In this sense, machines are maximally schizophrenic. They answer "yes" to "is there a cat on the matt?" not because there is one, but because "yes" was what they heard most often.
Producing models of correlations in half-baked measures of human activity has nothing to do with learning. And everything to do with a magic light box that fools dumb apes.