首页 /研究 /Alan Turing and the "Hard" and "Easy" Problem of Cognition: Doing and Feeling
OTHER

Alan Turing and the "Hard" and "Easy" Problem of Cognition: Doing and Feeling

Stevan Harnad

发表年份
2012
访问权限
开放获取

摘要

The "easy" problem of cognitive science is explaining how and why we can do what we can do. The "hard" problem is explaining how and why we feel. Turing's methodology for cognitive science (the Turing Test) is based on doing: Design a model that can do anything a human can do, indistinguishably from a human, to a human, and you have explained cognition. Searle has shown that the successful model cannot be solely computational. Sensory-motor robotic capacities are necessary to ground some, at least, of the model's words, in what the robot can do with the things in the world that the words are about. But even grounding is not enough to guarantee that -- nor to explain how and why -- the model feels (if it does). That problem is much harder to solve (and perhaps insoluble).

关键词

cs.AIcs.RO

相关论文

查看 OTHER 分类全部论文