Open Ended Intelligence: The individuation of Intelligent Agents
David Weinbaum (Weaver), Viktoras Veitas

TL;DR
This paper proposes a novel theoretical framework for understanding general intelligence as a self-organizing, individuating process called open-ended intelligence, moving beyond traditional competence-based views.
Contribution
It introduces the concept of open-ended intelligence as a paradigm shift, emphasizing self-organization and individuation in cognitive agents, and discusses its philosophical and practical implications.
Findings
Highlights limitations of current intelligence concepts
Proposes a scalable, self-organizing network model
Connects coordination with intelligence and values
Abstract
Artificial General Intelligence is a field of research aiming to distill the principles of intelligence that operate independently of a specific problem domain or a predefined context and utilize these principles in order to synthesize systems capable of performing any intellectual task a human being is capable of and eventually go beyond that. While "narrow" artificial intelligence which focuses on solving specific problems such as speech recognition, text comprehension, visual pattern recognition, robotic motion, etc. has shown quite a few impressive breakthroughs lately, understanding general intelligence remains elusive. In the paper we offer a novel theoretical approach to understanding general intelligence. We start with a brief introduction of the current conceptual approach. Our critique exposes a number of serious limitations that are traced back to the ontological roots of the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsEmbodied and Extended Cognition · Computability, Logic, AI Algorithms · Psychiatry, Mental Health, Neuroscience
