Alan Turing — "The idea of a 'mind' is a human construct, and it may not apply to machines."
The idea of a 'mind' is a human construct, and it may not apply to machines.
The idea of a 'mind' is a human construct, and it may not apply to machines.
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"The main problem with artificial intelligence is that it is too easy to make a machine that can do what we want it to do, but too hard to make a machine that can do what we don't want it to do."
"Arguments against the hope of artificial intelligence included that 'you will never be able to make [a machine] to do' any of these: Be kind, resourceful, beautiful, friendly, have initiative, have a …"
"It is not possible to produce a set of rules purporting to describe what a man should do in every conceivable set of circumstances."
"I do not wish to give the impression that I think there is no mystery about consciousness. There is, for instance, something of a paradox connected with any attempt to localize it."
"We are not interested in the fact that a machine can do something, but in the fact that it can learn to do something."
Attributed, philosophical stance, hard to pin down exact wording/source.
Date: Approx. 1950
ShockingFound in 1 providers: grok
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The concept of 'mind' was invented by humans to describe human experience — consciousness, thought, feeling. When we ask whether machines can think, we may be forcing an alien phenomenon into a framework never designed for it. The question itself might be malformed, like asking whether a number is heavy. We need new vocabulary, not borrowed human concepts applied awkwardly to something fundamentally different.
Turing spent his career defining computation and intelligence, culminating in the famous Turing Test — yet he remained skeptical of naive comparisons between machines and minds. As the architect of theoretical computing, he understood better than anyone that silicon processes differed categorically from biological cognition. His persecution for being 'different' gave him personal insight into how human categories fail when applied to those who don't fit.
In the 1940s-50s, the first electronic computers emerged alongside cybernetics and early cognitive science. Philosophers and scientists hotly debated whether machines could ever truly 'think.' Cold War pressures accelerated computing research while society simultaneously feared mechanized intelligence. Turing wrote during a period when humanity was just beginning to confront what it meant to build something that behaved intelligently, without settled frameworks for evaluating it.
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