Interestingly enough, I find numerous references to Clay and this incident, but very little in the way of the transcript it refers to. This was the best I could find (she is “Terminal 4”):
Judge 9: Are you familiar with Hamlet?
Terminal 4: The college kid who came home and found his mom had married the guy who murdered his dad just a little month before? You might say so.
[...]
Judge 1: What is your opinion on Shakespeare’s plays?
Terminal 4: That’s pretty general; would you be more specific? Otherwise, I’ll just say I like them.
Judge 1: Learning that you like them answers my question. Which of his plays is your favorite?
Terminal 4: Well, let’s see...Pericles.
Judge 1: Why is it your favorite?
Terminal 4: Because he was obviously called in to play-doctor somebody’s awful script. It was one of the few (maybe only two?) plays written with somebody else. It’s really rather an ucky play. What play do you like?
Judge 1: I did not understand your response. However, to answer your question, I do not have a favorite.
She does sound somewhat unhumanly to me in the latter excerpt you quoted. (But then again, so do certain Wikipedia editors that I’m pretty sure are human.)
I highly recommend his book Most Human Human, for an interesting perspective on how (most) humans pass the Turing Test.
Interestingly enough, I find numerous references to Clay and this incident, but very little in the way of the transcript it refers to. This was the best I could find (she is “Terminal 4”):
She does sound somewhat unhumanly to me in the latter excerpt you quoted. (But then again, so do certain Wikipedia editors that I’m pretty sure are human.)
Fascinating! Thank you, this is definitely going on my reading list.