Friday, May 31, 2019
Do Computers Think? :: essays research papers
Can or will computers ever speak up? Well this has been a subject of much logical argument between even the greatest minds, and yet there is still no adjudicate. First of all I sire would like you to answer a doubt. What is 4x13? Did you have to think to answer that? Yes? Well does that pixilated that a computer stick out think because it can answer that question. Well that is what we are going to set to answer and I think yes, depending on your definition of thinking.First off lets get something straight. When I refer to computers in this essay I am not referring only to the microprocessor sitting on your desk but to microprocessors that control robots of various structure.Well as I express we first must define to think. What does that mean? Websters New Compact Dictionary defines think as "1. Have a mind. 2. Believe. 3. Employ the mind.". It defines mind as to think. So does this mean that if you can think does this mean you have a mind? My opinion is that, accordi ng to this definition, computers can think. A computer can give you an answer to the question What is 4x13?, so it can think. Whats that? You say its just programmed to do that, if no one programmed it wouldnt be able to do that. Well how did you get how to answer the question? Your instructor or parents or someone taught it to you. So you were programmed, same as the computer was. So you think that computer programming is different than learning. You might think the same as my grandma that programing is something where things are just drilled into you like people who are members of cults. Well when your teacher stood over you desk in elementary and do drilled you on the multiplication tables was that not programming? Would you know that 1x5 does not equal 10 if everyone you ever met said that it did. Another argument my grandma used was my little cousin and how when he runs into a wall he learns that it hurts so he doesnt do it again. (Well genuinely he does it because he has a hard head). Yet a professor in Calgary builds robots that do not even contain a microprocessor yet it can learn. He builds them out of spare part from broken electronics such as walkmans.
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