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Eric Dane Walker's avatar

I loved this one. I have a couple of thoughts. (Forgive me if I'm raising topics you've covered in your earlier work.)

In my demimonde — philosophy — the term "abduction" can refer to either of two things. There's the pattern of hypothesis generation that Charles Sanders Peirce identified and characterized (in a mind-bogglingly variety of ways), and there's the pattern of hypothesis-generation-cum-hypothesis-concluding, the latter being called nowadays "inference to the best explanation." Though I've become fairly familiar with Peirce's semiology because of my pet research interests, I'm not, to my satisfaction, very knowledgeable about his views on abduction.

But I teach inference to the best explanation all the time: what it looks like when it goes well, its basic structure, the conditions under which it's possible for it to go well, and what to do when those conditions don't obtain. One thing that always strikes my students is how common and ordinary such reasoning is. That noise must be the skunk digging under the porch again. The children are suddenly quiet, so they must be doing something they know they shouldn't. That puddle in the laundry room must mean the washer's gone awry again.

Human beings are constantly, and virtually effortlessly, inferring the best explanation to everyday phenomena, implicitly entertaining rival explanations and ruling them out based both on our general understanding of things and on our understanding of the context, the latter understanding often including very subtle perceptions of relevance and salience. My students can very quickly be brought to see that brute computation, no matter how massive, simply cannot manifest such humble reasoning.

What you've crucially explained so well here is that AI is almost laughably impotent when it comes to reasoning about extraordinary things, such as plane crashes and outré scientific phenomena. What I'm suggesting — regarding inference to the best explanation, for, like I said, I'm not knowledgeable about Peircean abduction — is that AI is also almost laughably impotent when it comes to reasoning about utterly quotidian things.

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