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- Path: sparky!uunet!zaphod.mps.ohio-state.edu!moe.ksu.ksu.edu!kuhub.cc.ukans.edu!spssig.spss.com!markrose
- Newsgroups: comp.ai.philosophy
- Subject: Re: grounding and the entity/environment boundary
- Message-ID: <C051Kq.8tD@spss.com>
- From: markrose@spss.com (Mark Rosenfelder)
- Date: Thu, 31 Dec 1992 19:17:14 GMT
- Sender: news@spss.com (Net News Admin)
- References: <1992Dec28.144030.23113@cs.wm.edu> <C00GMG.ML7@iat.holonet.net>
- Organization: SPSS Inc.
- Lines: 64
-
- In article <C00GMG.ML7@iat.holonet.net> ken@iat.holonet.net (Ken Easlon) writes:
- >In article <1992Dec28.144030.23113@cs.wm.edu> ,
- >I plead guilty to bringing soup into the discussion, with no clear purpose
- >other than to explore the ramifications of Chris Malcolm's idea that
- >entity/environment lines can be drawn around "ownership".
- >
- >My involvement in this thread started when I read Mark Rosenfelder's
- >comments to the effect that the entity/environment boundary should be drawn
- >along contours of minimum information exchange.
- >
- >It seems to me there can be many shells within a functional definition of
- >entity across which information exchange might be minimized, so I
- >challenged Mark's criteria by bringing up human entities and tools, and
- >suggesting an extreme example of a functional definition of entity where
- >the boundary might be drawn along contours of maximum information exchange.
- >
- >This was the point where Chris suggested the ownership criteria and I
- >brought in the soup.
- >
- >My current view as (ramblingly) posited in <BzyK19.2B5@iat.holonet.net>
- >is that the entity should be defined as a core of tool operating
- >capability, and interchangeable tools should be thought of as sort of a
- >physical interface between the entity and environment.
- >
- >When Mark returns from vacation, he'll probably have some counter-arguments
- >that will take the thread back to the issue of "grounding".
-
- Only because I don't see how the entity/environment boundary can be discussed
- in isolation; the subject came up in relation to grounding. If I may quote
- my own earlier salvo:
-
- I'm interested in what it takes to make an AI grounded-- to make its use of
- language meaningful rather than "merely syntactic"-- to have it know what
- it's talking about. Placing Harnad, Lakoff, and my own musings into a
- blender and pressing "Liquefy", I come up with this: For an entity to be
- (statically) grounded it must have high-bandwidth sensorimotor experience
- with the real world; it's less grounded to the extent that the experience
- is of low quality or quantity, or not really its own, or is weakly
- integrated with its internal architecture. Dynamic grounding would depend
- on a capacity to maintain this experience and function in the world.
- I trust you can see how this formulation leads to a concern with what is
- or isn't part of the system.
-
- The problem with all the proposals aired so far, including my own, is a
- maddening vagueness. The ideal is would be criteria that can be applied
- to the human case and produce the "right answer", which to me would be that
- your eyes, fingers, and nose are part of you but your gloves, pocket knife,
- and Unix account aren't; these criteria could then be applied to robots and
- computers to help evaluate their grounding.
-
- The kind of peripherals you've been talking about-- "interchangeable tools"
- connected to the processor by a standard interface-- don't seem to me to offer
- much grounding potential, precisely because they're low-bandwidth (grounding
- requires loads of information) and because they're interchangeable (implying
- low integration with the core entity).
-
- Just in case I haven't laid out enough flame-bait already... Some alternative
- conceptions of grounding avoid the boundary problem by concentrating on
- correlation of the internal world model with the real world. The problem I
- have with these conceptions is that it's even less clear where you draw the
- line between an ungrounded system that's just playing with symbols and one
- that really knows what it's talking about; that it's not clear how many
- errors, gaps, and ambiguities are permitted in the correlation; and that the
- origin of the correlation is not taken into account.
-