Neo "knew" Kung Fu. But he didn't learn it. I think we all realize that bit of the movie takes a serious suspension of disbelief. Muscle memory and the reactions necessary to be proficient in a martial art cannot be downloaded. It takes training. Training is experiential. Education is experiential.
AI is missing what we call Tacit Knowledge, which includes our experiences, intuitions, skills, and insights that we develop over time. Most of what we learn as tacit knowledge is not in any book or can be taught to another person as you have to live and experience it to learn it. This is why we handle the edge cases in the self-driving cars scenario better than AI.
The above is why I always say we are more than books, articles, and posts on the internet, and that part will be very difficult to learn with the current approach of AI.
While AI can process vast amounts of data and identify patterns, it struggles with the intuitive and experiential aspects of human understanding. This is why humans often excel in situations requiring creativity, empathy, and nuanced judgment—areas where tacit knowledge plays a crucial role.
Every problem cannot be solved by mathematics or more data, but for now, unfortunately, this is what the AI industry thinks.
Bingo. I think you nailed it.
Neo "knew" Kung Fu. But he didn't learn it. I think we all realize that bit of the movie takes a serious suspension of disbelief. Muscle memory and the reactions necessary to be proficient in a martial art cannot be downloaded. It takes training. Training is experiential. Education is experiential.
Thank you so much. And I think that is spot on!
I agree with you.
AI is missing what we call Tacit Knowledge, which includes our experiences, intuitions, skills, and insights that we develop over time. Most of what we learn as tacit knowledge is not in any book or can be taught to another person as you have to live and experience it to learn it. This is why we handle the edge cases in the self-driving cars scenario better than AI.
The above is why I always say we are more than books, articles, and posts on the internet, and that part will be very difficult to learn with the current approach of AI.
While AI can process vast amounts of data and identify patterns, it struggles with the intuitive and experiential aspects of human understanding. This is why humans often excel in situations requiring creativity, empathy, and nuanced judgment—areas where tacit knowledge plays a crucial role.
Every problem cannot be solved by mathematics or more data, but for now, unfortunately, this is what the AI industry thinks.