The same bias to...what? From the inside, the AI might feel “conflicted” or “weirded out” by a yellow, furry, ellipsoid shaped object, but that’s not necessarily a bug: maybe this feeling accumulates and eventually results in creating new sub-categories. The AI won’t necessarily get into the argument about definitions, because while part of that argument comes from the neural architecture above, the other part comes from the need to win arguments—and the evolutionary bias for humans to win arguments would not be present in most AI designs.
The same bias to...what? From the inside, the AI might feel “conflicted” or “weirded out” by a yellow, furry, ellipsoid shaped object, but that’s not necessarily a bug: maybe this feeling accumulates and eventually results in creating new sub-categories. The AI won’t necessarily get into the argument about definitions, because while part of that argument comes from the neural architecture above, the other part comes from the need to win arguments—and the evolutionary bias for humans to win arguments would not be present in most AI designs.