On the Relationship between Wittgenstein's Philosophy and Artificial Intelligence Science
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DOI: 10.38007/Proceedings.0001272
Corresponding Author
Ruoyu Deng
Abstract
As early as Turing's time, there were in-depth discussions and debates on the question of whether machines could think. In order to refute Turing's positive opinion, the philosopher Wittgenstein proposed a scheme of "meaning blindness”. To clarify the difference between human beings and machines, machines are inferior to human beings in that they have no instinctive impulse, self-awareness, free will, mental structure and language construction ability, and cannot feel and create a rich world of meaning in the game of language. At the same time, it also affirms their family similarity, similarity of thinking, language and algorithm, and similarity of abiding by rules. With the arrival of the era of artificial intelligence, although Turing's theory of strong artificial intelligence has obvious scientific advantages, Wittgenstein's scheme has the foresight of philosophers and has a very positive reference value when exploring the security of artificial intelligence.
Keywords
Wittgenstein; Artificial Intelligence (AI); Relationship