I don’t think Deep Blue “knew” that it was trying to beat Gary Kasparov in the game of chess. It was programmed to come up with every possible alternative move and evaluate the outcome of each in terms of an eventual result of taking K’s king. The human brain is elegant, but it’s not fast, and unquestionable no human could have evaluated all the possible moves within the time limit. Deep Blue is quaint compared to the Universal Machines of the near future. David Deutsch claims that quantum computers will be able to factor numbers that would require a human more time than is known to have existed in the history of the universe. It won’t have superhuman intelligence, but it will be fast. Imagine if it’s programs were recursively self-improving.
I don’t think Deep Blue “knew” that it was trying to beat Gary Kasparov in the game of chess. It was programmed to come up with every possible alternative move and evaluate the outcome of each in terms of an eventual result of taking K’s king. The human brain is elegant, but it’s not fast, and unquestionable no human could have evaluated all the possible moves within the time limit. Deep Blue is quaint compared to the Universal Machines of the near future. David Deutsch claims that quantum computers will be able to factor numbers that would require a human more time than is known to have existed in the history of the universe. It won’t have superhuman intelligence, but it will be fast. Imagine if it’s programs were recursively self-improving.