AI overview: 1. From the Greeks to the Big Bang episode artwork

EPISODE · Aug 8, 2022 · 31 MIN

AI overview: 1. From the Greeks to the Big Bang

from London Futurists · host London Futurists

AI is a subject that we will all benefit from understanding better. In this episode, co-hosts Calum Chace and David Wood review progress in AI from the Greeks to the 2012 "Big Bang".00.05: A prediction01.09: AI is likely to cause two singularities in this pivotal century - a jobless economy, and superintelligence02.22: Counterpoint: it may require AGI to displace most people from the workforce. So only one singularity?03.27: Jobs are nowhere near all that matters in humans04.11: Are the "Three Cs jobs" safe? Those involving Creativity, Compassion, and Commonsense? Probably not.05.15: 2012, the Big Bang in AI05.48: AI now makes money. Google and Facebook ate Rupert Murdoch's lunch06.30: AI might make the difference between military success and military failure. So there's a geopolitical race as well as a commercial race07.18: Defining AI.09.03: Intelligence vs Consciousness10.15: Does the Turing Test test for Intelligence or Consciousness?12.30: Can customer service agents pass the Turing Test?13.07: Attributing consciousness by brain architecture or by behaviour15.13: Creativity. Move 37 in game two of AlphaGo vs Lee Sedol, and Hassabis' three buckets of creativity17.13: Music and art produced by AI as examples19.05: History: Start with the Greeks, Hephaestus (Vulcan to the Romans) built automata, and Aristotle speculated about technological unemployment19.58: AI has featured in science fiction from the beginning, eg Mary Shelley's Frankenstein, Samuel Butler's Erewhon, E.M. Forster's "The Machine Stops"20.55: Post-WW2 developments. Conference in Paris in 1951 on "Computing machines and human thought". Norbert Weiner and cybernetics22.48: The Dartmouth Conference23.55: Perceptrons - very simple models of the human brain25.13: Perceptrons debunked by Minsky and Papert, so Symbolic AI takes over25.49: This debunking was a mistake. More data and better hardware overcomes the hurdles27.20: Two AI winters, when research funding dries up 28.07: David was taught maths at Cambridge by James Lighthill, author of the report which helped cause the first AI winter28.58: The Japanese 5th generation computing project under-delivered in the 1980s. But it prompted an AI revival, and its ambitions have been realised by more recent advances30.45: No more AI winters?Music: Spike Protein, by Koi Discovery, available under CC0 1.0 Public Domain DeclarationFor more about the podcast hosts, see https://calumchace.com/ and https://dw2blog.com/C-Suite PerspectivesElevate how you lead with insight from today’s most influential executives.Listen on: Apple Podcasts   Spotify

AI is a subject that we will all benefit from understanding better. In this episode, co-hosts Calum Chace and David Wood review progress in AI from the Greeks to the 2012 "Big Bang". 00.05: A prediction 01.09: AI is likely to cause two singularities in this pivotal century - a jobless economy, and superintelligence 02.22: Counterpoint: it may require AGI to displace most people from the workforce. So only one singularity? 03.27: Jobs are nowhere near all that matters in humans 04.11: Are the...

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AI overview: 1. From the Greeks to the Big Bang

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Song Against Songs, The by G. K. Chesterton (1874 - 1936) LibriVox LibriVox volunteers bring you 9 recordings of The Song Against Songs by G. K. Chesterton. This was the Fortnightly Poetry project for October 16, 2011.Chesterton was a large man, standing 6 feet 4 inches (1.93 m) and weighing around 21 stone (130 kg; 290 lb). His girth gave rise to a famous anecdote. During World War I a lady in London asked why he was not 'out at the Front'; he replied, 'If you go round to the side, you will see that I am.' On another occasion he remarked to his friend George Bernard Shaw: "To look at you, anyone would think a famine had struck England". Shaw retorted, "To look at you, anyone would think you have caused it". P. G. Wodehouse once described a very loud crash as "a sound like Chesterton falling onto a sheet of tin."( Summary from Wikipedia ) What Works? Sophie Scott, UCL PALS Prof Sophie Scott, Director of the Institute of Cognitive Neuroscience at University College London, discusses life and science and careers with her colleagues from the Division of Psychology and Language Sciences at UCL, and beyond. The aim of the show is to highlight some amazing scientists, and explore their journeys through science and life, and find out what works for them. LA LUZ DEL MISTERIO CON JULIO BARROSO LA LUZ DEL MISTERIO Es el 1er podcast del Misterio en habla hispana desde 1993 y el programa genuino del misterio que se emite desde el centro de Londres, desde el centro de Europa, en London Radio World para todo el universo. Desde hace 31 años, cada semana puedes descargarte las emisiones desde iVoox, iTunes, Spotify, You Tube & Amazon. Y vive el misterio, antropología, astroarqueología, viajes desconocidos, criminología... Vive el Misterio. Pasa, ponte cómodo y disfruta...Si deseas apoyarnos: https://www.ivoox.com/ajx-apoyar_i1_support_29070_1.htmlContacta con nosotros a través de:[email protected] Estamos en Facebook, Instagram & Twitter.Si deseas apoyarnos: https://www.ivoox.com/ajx-apoyar_i1_support_29070_1.htmlhttps://www.ivoox.com/luz-del-misterio-especial-peru-nazca-i-audios-mp3_rf_43511668_1.html WW2 - the Key Questions, answered by Laurence Rees. Laurence Rees A former Head of BBC TV History programmes, Laurence has specialized in writing books and making television documentaries about World War Two, the Nazis and Stalinism for thirty years. He won a BAFTA and a Peabody for his TV series 'The Nazis: A Warning from History' and a British Book Award for his book on Auschwitz, which is also the world's best selling book on this notorious camp. His book 'the Holocaust: A New History' was described by the Times as 'exemplary' and by the Daily Telegraph as 'the best single volume account of the atrocity ever written'. Educated at Oxford University, for several years he was a visiting senior fellow at the London School of Economics, London University. He holds honorary doctorates from the University of Sheffield and the Open University. Professor Robert Service, of Oxford University, described Rees as 'one of the world's experts on the Second World War'. Sir Max Hastings wrote in the Sunday Times, in a review of Laurence Rees' 'World War Two: Behi

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AI is a subject that we will all benefit from understanding better. In this episode, co-hosts Calum Chace and David Wood review progress in AI from the Greeks to the 2012 "Big Bang".00.05: A prediction01.09: AI is likely to cause two singularities...

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