Are you really making the argument that human flight hasn’t been effectively achieved at this point?
I actually kind of love this comparison — it demonstrates the point that just like “human flight”, “true AGI” isn’t a single point in time, it’s a many-decade (multi-century?) process of refinement and evolution.
Scholars a millennia from now will be debating about when each of these were actually “truly” achieved.
I’ve never heard it described this way: AGI as similar to human flight. I think it’s subtle and clever - my two most favorite properties.
To me, we have both achieved and not human flight. Can humans themselves fly? No. Can people fly in planes across continents. Yes.
But, does it really matter if it counts as “human flight” if we can get from point A to point B faster? You’re right - this is an argument that will last ages.
I actually kind of love this comparison — it demonstrates the point that just like “human flight”, “true AGI” isn’t a single point in time, it’s a many-decade (multi-century?) process of refinement and evolution.
Scholars a millennia from now will be debating about when each of these were actually “truly” achieved.