Religion, Objectives, Learning and smart planning in Artificial Intelligence
April 11th, 2009 | by Steve | 348 views | 0 Comments | Log in |Studying the impressive results of AIML, which is supported also by our SitePal eSoul, I was asking myself what would be the next steps to move forward in AI? (As Dr Richard Wallace observed in one of the longest interviews on slashdot.org there is not to much progress outside AIML, and considering that the remark was from 2002, we can safely say that AIML, too, is not progressing to fast…).
One first thing to observe is that I asked this myself, and a lot of deductions and lernings I get this way, so, one thing would be to adapt AIML to allow chatbots to talk to themselves and make some deductions out of their own questions.
Secondly, the questions and answers need to follow a certain objectives and the robot should be capable of auto-scheduling his own time and dedicating more time to the most promising self dialogs. Which means some planning abilities and some judgement on value of new learnings and deductions. Then, in order to not artificially limit the eSoul in his life journey, some very basic religious or philosophical questions must be at the root of the cognitive tree in the digital mind, left to be answered and explored, as humans are, by the bot in order to ensure a never ending quest on learning about creator, universe, origin of life, etc.
Finally bots have to be able to socialize and exchange learnings in some sort of market place, sure through the internet.
If we’ll enable these in AIML then we’ll have plenty of eSouls swarming the net…




































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