Kirby wrote:I've been quite interested in machine learning, and artificial intelligence in general, since college.
Me too; in my case, that's since 1971; but i don't think that during that time AI has advanced much compared to advances in computer hardware, despite the current hullabaloo. For sure, Alfie's impressive achievements are remarkable, but could it be that they tell us more about the nature of games like chess and Go than they do about the nature of intelligence?
To examine that question deeper than handwaving, we need to be aware that Alfie's method is basically a statistical number-crunching approach, which requires hardware able to read (probabilistically) all the way to the end of the game and back again gerzillions of times each time she has to make a move.
She can do this because although the game tree of Go is kind of big (sic), it's not that deep - at most 361. To be fair, her probabilistic navigator is sufficiently better than random to weed out enough nonsense that she can find moves good enough to beat people at the game they invented.
Alfie is as impressive at playing Go as a mobile phone is at recording and transmitting information - and considering the state of the telephony art 50 years ago, that's pretty impressive.
But is Alfie as smart as, say, an acacia tree that responds to overgrazing by releasing poison gas to ward off kudu?
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Q-4w5xYLwiU
Or a Douglas Fir that nurtures its young?
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CrrSAc-vjG4
The robot football world cup maybe gives us a better idea about how smart today's machines are.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=R2S9x0gUkpM
PS Needless to say, i think Swim is more intelligent than Alfie, but i suppose you could justifiably argue that i am a bit biased...
PPS Don't fret Kirby, your existence is not as meaningless as that of a Go stone, albeit no more meaningful than that of an acacia tree:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wq3B5prBsK0