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Telepathy Proof Room – Alan Turing’s Human Machines

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Manage episode 494990879 series 3486512
Content provided by Patrick. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Patrick or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://ppacc.player.fm/legal.

In this episode, I return to Alan Turing’s 1950 essay in Mind "Computing Machinery and Intelligence" – a foundational text in the history of artificial intelligence, but also one that is far stranger, more playful, and more haunting than we might anticipates. This is the essay where Turing famously asks, "Can machines think?" But rather than define thinking, he proposes a game - the Imitation Game[The Turing Test] - a conversational test designed not to reveal intelligence as an inner property, but as something enacted, judged, and performed in dialogue. We explore how this seemingly simple setup unsettles traditional metaphysical assumptions about the mind. On my re-reading I didn’t find a cold piece of determinism, it contains moments of humour, wonder, and a surprising detour into telepathy - a bizarre and often forgotten detail. What emerges is a vision of intelligence not as a static essence, but as a kind of performance -something that must be continually enacted and recognised by others.

If you would like to study with me you can find more information about our online education MAs in Philosophy here at Staffordshire University. You can find out more information on our MA in Continental Philosophy via this link. Or, join our MA in Philosophy of Nature, Information and Technology via this link. Find out more about me here. September intakes F/T or January intakes P/T. You can listen to more free back content from the Thales' Well podcast on TuneIn Radio, Player Fm, Stitcher and Pod Bean. You can also download their apps to your smart phone and listen via there. You can also subscribe for free on iTunes. Please leave a nice review.

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24 episodes

Artwork
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Manage episode 494990879 series 3486512
Content provided by Patrick. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Patrick or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://ppacc.player.fm/legal.

In this episode, I return to Alan Turing’s 1950 essay in Mind "Computing Machinery and Intelligence" – a foundational text in the history of artificial intelligence, but also one that is far stranger, more playful, and more haunting than we might anticipates. This is the essay where Turing famously asks, "Can machines think?" But rather than define thinking, he proposes a game - the Imitation Game[The Turing Test] - a conversational test designed not to reveal intelligence as an inner property, but as something enacted, judged, and performed in dialogue. We explore how this seemingly simple setup unsettles traditional metaphysical assumptions about the mind. On my re-reading I didn’t find a cold piece of determinism, it contains moments of humour, wonder, and a surprising detour into telepathy - a bizarre and often forgotten detail. What emerges is a vision of intelligence not as a static essence, but as a kind of performance -something that must be continually enacted and recognised by others.

If you would like to study with me you can find more information about our online education MAs in Philosophy here at Staffordshire University. You can find out more information on our MA in Continental Philosophy via this link. Or, join our MA in Philosophy of Nature, Information and Technology via this link. Find out more about me here. September intakes F/T or January intakes P/T. You can listen to more free back content from the Thales' Well podcast on TuneIn Radio, Player Fm, Stitcher and Pod Bean. You can also download their apps to your smart phone and listen via there. You can also subscribe for free on iTunes. Please leave a nice review.

  continue reading

24 episodes

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