this post was submitted on 27 Dec 2024
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For sure, and I think it's a really important thing to keep in mind that our own logic is far from being infallible. Humans easily fall for all kinds of logical fallacies, and we find formal reasoning to be very difficult. It takes scientists years of training to develop this mindset, and they are still unable to eliminate the problem of biases and other fallacies. This is why we rely on concepts like peer review to mitigate these problems.
An artificial reasoning system should be held to a similar standard as our own reasoning instead of some ideal of rational thought. I think that the key aspects that need to be focused on is consistency, ability to explain the steps, and being able to integrate feedback to correct mistakes. If we can get that going, then we'd have systems that can improve themselves over time and that can be taught the way we teach humans.