Mike Tintner wrote:
Hi,
I strongly disagree - there is a need to provide a definition of AGI - not necessarily the right or optimal definition, but one that poses concrete challenges and focusses the mind - even if it's only a starting-point. The reason the Turing Test has been such a successful/ popular idea is that it focusses the mind.
...

OK. A program is an AGI if it can do a high school kid's homework and get him good grades for 1 week (during which there aren't any pop-quizes, mid-terms, or other in-school and closed book exams.

That's not an optimal definition, but if you can handle essays and story problems and math and biology as expressed by a teacher, then you've got a pretty good AGI.

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