Leon Sterling | Professor In Software Engineering Computing and Information Systems at The University of Melbourne
The launch of Chat-GPT in November 2022 has launched a flurry of activity and discussion about artificial intelligence – its ethics, its practice, what it means for humanity. Yet it is not well defined, and people often credit it with things that it is not. As an artificial intelligence researcher for over 40 years, I have seen interest wax and wane. But the term is still something I cannot easily define. This blog post discusses definitions of artificial intelligence developed for teaching in the 1990s.
One of the early definitions of artificial intelligence is attributed to Marvin Minsky, one of the pioneers of the field. According to Minsky, Artificial Intelligence is programming computers to solve tasks that would require intelligence for people to solve.
Here are three observations that follow from the definition.
Observation 1: Artificial intelligence necessarily involves computers, and indeed the field is inherently part of computer science, though other fields have rushed to adopt it. Given that the problems the computer is intended to solve can come from any field, artificial intelligence is interdisciplinary.
Observation 2: Artificial intelligence necessarily involves building programs which suggests there is a practical component to the field.
Observation 3: People’s behaviour is the arbiter of appropriate study for artificial intelligence. We believe that intelligence is a useful description of people. Distilling that experience may make computers more useful.