P
PseuTonym
Guest
I ask because I get the impression that there might be a popular misconception to the effect that the existence of a known framework of unambiguous rules that is provided to all participants in some activity is enough to remove any need for intelligence or ingenuity from the activity.
Perhaps we should take a step back before approaching the question “Do you see goals, rules, and intelligence as a cluster of related ideas?”
A more basic question: do you make a sharp distinction between achieving a goal and obeying some command?
Perhaps an example will help:
Here is a goal: write a computer program that will ask the user how many digits of pi are to be computed, and then compute them and display them.
Here is a command: given a positive integer written in ordinary base-ten notation, add one, and then write the result below the positive integer that was given.
In practice, it might require some intelligence to merely obey commands. For example, there is a tendency to interpret some commands in terms of some imagined goal of a person who is issuing the commands. It may require the application of some intelligence to recognize a distinction between a command itself, how an average person who is trying to obey the command might interpret it, and how the person who is issuing the command might interpret it.
However, in principle we can recognize that some commands (such as the lines of a computer program), are clear enough that they basically do not require intelligence to obey. After all, we do not think of a computer as being intelligent.
Perhaps we should take a step back before approaching the question “Do you see goals, rules, and intelligence as a cluster of related ideas?”
A more basic question: do you make a sharp distinction between achieving a goal and obeying some command?
Perhaps an example will help:
Here is a goal: write a computer program that will ask the user how many digits of pi are to be computed, and then compute them and display them.
Here is a command: given a positive integer written in ordinary base-ten notation, add one, and then write the result below the positive integer that was given.
In practice, it might require some intelligence to merely obey commands. For example, there is a tendency to interpret some commands in terms of some imagined goal of a person who is issuing the commands. It may require the application of some intelligence to recognize a distinction between a command itself, how an average person who is trying to obey the command might interpret it, and how the person who is issuing the command might interpret it.
However, in principle we can recognize that some commands (such as the lines of a computer program), are clear enough that they basically do not require intelligence to obey. After all, we do not think of a computer as being intelligent.