Title: Martin Luther King and the Ghost in the Machine
1Martin Luther King and the Ghost in the Machine
- Kalamazoo College 2003
- MLK Week Teach-in
2The birth of the modern US Civil Rights Movement
- Dec. 1 1955 Rosa Parks refuses to move to the
back of the bus. - Bus boycott organized King elected president of
Montgomery Improvement Association. - Nov. 13, 1956 US Supreme Court declares race
segregation illegal boycott ends, and full,
integrated service restored. - King achieves national prominence as civil rights
leader.
3The birth of artificial intelligence research
- Summer, 1956 First Darthmouth Conference on
AIWe propose that a 2 month, 10 man study of
artificial intelligence be carried out during the
summer of 1956 at Dartmouth College in Hanover,
New Hampshire. - First common use of the term artificial
intelligence - http//www-formal.stanford.edu/jmc/history/dartmou
th/dartmouth.html
41956 Dartmouth AI Conference Attendees
5Lost opportunties
- The Civil Rights movement and AI research started
at the same time, - They never talked to each other.
- What opportunities were lost as a result?
6King on Technology
- Warns against technology as Moloch
- Worried about automation leading to people
being thrown out of work. - Worried about destructive power of violence.
7Opportunities to be of (peaceful) service to the
community
- Majority of AI research has always been funded by
the military. - But AI problems are everywhere (although not
always fundable). - The opportunity to found an non-racist, inclusive
science.
8King on technology
- Automation can be used to generate an abundance
of wealth for people. Our society, with its
ability to perform miracles with machinery has
the capacity to make miracles for men--if it
values men as highly as it values machines (From
If the Negro wins, Labor wins.) - Through our scientific and technological genius,
we have made of this world a neighborhood and yet
we have not had the ethical commitment to make of
it a brotherhood. (From Remaining awake through
a great revolution)
9The Ghost in the Machine
- Gilbert Ryle description of Cartesian dualism
- Body is different from Mind/Soul, etc. (see your
philosophy teacher)
10Teaching Whiteness
- Teaching Whiteness, The End of Innocence, Gail B.
Griffin, to be published - Stories and reflections and critical essays on
of being White, teaching writing at Kalamazoo
College. - You did go to chapel today, didnt you?
11A quote from Teaching Whiteness
The irony (or paradox, or both) of whiteness is
that its failure to name itself, while it
arrogates one kind of godlike power (the power of
universality and ubiquity), denies another. For
to be universal and ubiquitous--to be Everything,
Everywhere--is in fact to be Nothing, and
Nowhere, in particular.As the absent agent in a
passive construction, whiteness erases itself.
White language says, in short, I am not here I
do not exist. It does so, of course, to avoid
implicating itself in the relations, past and
present, of racism. But the price for such
exoneration is eternal absence,
non-being--ghostliness.
12Another missed opportunity
- To reflect on, model, build demos about AIs own
Whiteness.
13What is AI?
- Dartmouth goals
- every aspect of learning or any other feature of
intelligence can in principle be so precisely
described that a machine can be made to simulate
it. - Automatic computers, use language, neuron nets,
theory of computation, self-improvement,
abstractions, randomness and creativity
14What is AI?
15AI is hard
- Language is AI-Hard
- Vision is AI-Hard
- Planning is AI-Hard
- . Is AI-Hard
- Schanks medieval view of AI
16What if there are only so many ideas to discover?
Erdöss Gods book of Proofs
Keplers Thinking Gods Thoughts After Him
17Idea discovery
A researcher is a kind of an experiment the
probability that a given researcher will discover
an idea is P(n,m).
Lets assume ideas are independent researchers
are independent P(n,m) is constant, call it p.
18Idea discovery (2)
The probability that an idea is discovered by at
least one researcher 1-(1-p)m
19Idea discovery (3)
How to improve success? 1-(1-p)m
Increase the exponential. 1-(1-p)m
20Youre handpicking the invite list to
Dartmouthup to 100!
All US
White, non-Hispanic US
White, non-Hispanic Males in US
p.01
.643
100
.587
88
.351
43
1940
.634
100
.500
69
.289
34
2000
21Idea discovery (model 2)
N good ideas
M researchers
Ideas and people are not colorless.
Lets assume ideas are independent researchers
are independent but P(n,m) is greater if the
color of n and m is the same than if they are
different.
22Idea discovery (model 2)
N good ideas
M researchers
nb number of blue ideas ng number of green
ideasmb no. of blue researchers mg green
researchersp probability if colors match p?
prob. If not match
Let I(p,m)1-(1-p)m with colors, average
discoveries are
I(nb,p,mb)(1-I(nb,p,mb)) I(nb,p?,mg) for
blue ideas I(ng,p,mg)(1-I(nb,p,mb))
I(ng,p?,mb) for green ideas
23Back to Dartmouth
White, non-Hispanic Males Green All others Blue
White, non-Hispanic Males Green WNH Females Blue
White, non-Hispanic Males in US only
p .01p? .001
.423
43,57
.385
43,45
.197
43,0
1940
.419
34,66
.317
34,35
.161
34,0
2000
24And if color of ideas reflects idealized color
of researcher
White, non-Hispanic Males Green All others Blue
White, non-Hispanic Males Green WNH Females Blue
White, non-Hispanic Males in US only
p .01p? .001
.428
43,57
.386
43,45
.175
43,0
1940
.445
34,66
.318
34,35
.121
34,0
2000
25A conclusion
- These green ideas, which we (AI researchers)
thought were colorless, lie dormant. I suspect
they are angry. - I suspect these colorless green ideas sleep
furiously.
26What are some of these ideas?
- Themes of being human which are not captured by
viewing the field (artificial intelligence) as
building agents that engage in rational action.
27Dr. King is my research advisor
- Justice, mercy, conversion, forgiveness,
violence, revenge, race, politics, resistance,
persuasion, honor, dignity, sacrifice, love, evil
- (To be fair, some researchers have done AI
research, especially when doing story
understanding)
28Analogical reasoning
- It is always difficult to get out of Egypt, for
the Red Sea always stands before you with
discouraging dimensions. And even after youve
crossed the Red Sea, you have to move through a
wilderness with prodigious hilltops of evil and
gigantic mountains of opposition. (Kings sermon
during boycott)
29Missed Opportunities
- To be of peaceful, just service.
- To found an anti-racist science.
- whose practitioners reflected the makeup of
society, - and came to a better understanding of race and
Whiteness in our cognitive models. - To model and demonstrate the fuller strands of
what it means to be human.
30What could AI be?
Thinking rationally.
Thinking like a human.
Acting rationally.
Acting like a human.
Acting humanely. (humane computing cognitive
technology)
Being like a human. (computational humanism)