Forming deterministic actions is a sign of computation, not intelligence. Intelligence is probably (I guess) dependent on the nondeterministic actions.
Computation is when you query a standby, doing nothing, machine and it computes a deterministic answer. Intelligence (or at least some sign of it) is when machine queries you, the operator, on it's own volition.
> Intelligence (or at least some sign of it) is when machine queries you, the operator, on it's own volition.
So you think the thing, who holds more control/force at doing arbitrary things as the thing sees fit, is more intelligent? That sounds to me more like the definition of power, not intelligence.
> So you think the thing, who holds more control/force at doing arbitrary things as the thing sees fit, is more intelligent? That sounds to me more like the definition of power, not intelligence.
I want to address this item. I think not about control or comparing something to something. I think intelligence is having at least some/any voluntary thinking. A cat can't do math or write text, but he can think on his own volition and is therefore intelligent being. A CPU running some externally predefined commands, is not intelligent, yet.
I wonder if LLM can be stepping stone to intelligence or not, but it is not clear for me.
Computation is when you query a standby, doing nothing, machine and it computes a deterministic answer. Intelligence (or at least some sign of it) is when machine queries you, the operator, on it's own volition.