Interview With Marvin Minsky, 1990

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  • Опубликовано: 20 ноя 2024

Комментарии • 85

  • @Brandon-ex8ui
    @Brandon-ex8ui 2 года назад +32

    Wow his voice is completely different than it was in his later years

  • @guitarcrax127
    @guitarcrax127 3 года назад +18

    What a joy to have been able to see this, I love how contrarian Marvin is. He has inspired so much in me

  • @glenna.jaspart1391
    @glenna.jaspart1391 2 года назад +13

    Jeff Goldblum could have played him in a movie on his life.

    • @lekoman
      @lekoman Год назад

      And perhaps may still.

  • @tattoomas
    @tattoomas Год назад

    thank you so much for sharing this Interview
    😍

  • @verakalinichenko719
    @verakalinichenko719 Год назад +1

    Amazing and fascinating interview, thank you for sharing this. Love his vision back then saying that he would not be surprised that by 2010 (maybe 10-20 years later) pieces of software would be simulate what human brain does

  • @Floxflow
    @Floxflow 5 лет назад +12

    High quality interview, with the questions, sound and resolution.

  • @barryispuzzled
    @barryispuzzled 4 года назад +15

    The cameraman believes that at the start of every question is a good time to alter the shot. Leave it alone!

  • @sameeruddin
    @sameeruddin 2 года назад +2

    Thank yo for uploading this !

  • @pdd3
    @pdd3 6 месяцев назад +2

    Best ASMR video

  • @yank3656
    @yank3656 4 года назад +2

    thanks for sharing
    WGBH

  • @Silvertestrun
    @Silvertestrun Год назад +1

    Ty

  • @Nate3145-zt8rh
    @Nate3145-zt8rh 4 месяца назад +1

    This guy is so awesome

  • @CoreyChambersLA
    @CoreyChambersLA Год назад

    In 1990, Marvin Minsky astutely describes the challenges and difficulties of Artificial Intelligence at the time: not enough people working on it; limited public interest, limited tools, not enough money being invested in it; limited computational technology, insuffienct publishing of accomplishments and failures etc

  • @The_Conspiracy_Analyst
    @The_Conspiracy_Analyst 8 месяцев назад +4

    This guy was caught on a weird island resort doing really weird stuff

  • @francesbrisco776
    @francesbrisco776 11 месяцев назад

    had a very calm way of speaking

  • @mark83175
    @mark83175 3 года назад +1

    Just his opening comment alone is eye opening.

  • @potterj09
    @potterj09 2 года назад +4

    For a awhile some suspected he was the Unabomber lol

    • @edwardjones2202
      @edwardjones2202 Год назад

      Probably because he doesn't like Chomsky 😆

  • @bichogrande2117
    @bichogrande2117 3 месяца назад

    His outer visual cortex I very shiny ✨️

  • @mouradgridach3185
    @mouradgridach3185 5 лет назад +5

    Woooow what a video of Marvin, Thanks for sharing. One of the influential people in my life

  • @science212
    @science212 3 года назад +2

    Great person.

  • @Wearefree83
    @Wearefree83 7 месяцев назад

    He was a truly visionary man

  • @WallaceRoseVincent
    @WallaceRoseVincent 2 года назад +1

    Was he related to Hyman Minsky (the economist who conceive of the Minsky moment)?

  • @waitwhat6882
    @waitwhat6882 4 года назад +4

    Can’t even imagine being as intelligent as him and Paul Samuelson

    • @peterb5
      @peterb5 2 года назад

      Yeah, now imagine what went on in Richard Feynmans head 😂

  • @Neo.467.35
    @Neo.467.35 5 лет назад +10

    The Great Marvin Minsky

    • @holahola-gp6vd
      @holahola-gp6vd 4 года назад +2

      what was so great? if you look at his predictions from early 60' he was wrong at almost everything .i dont mean to disrespect him because he is smart guy. i work at the A.I field and trust me it is mostly hype that the media is selling for nerds and star wars fans.
      in reality A.I is just a bunch of equations that can do some cool things and recognize some patterns but thats about it.

    • @waitwhat6882
      @waitwhat6882 4 года назад

      @@holahola-gp6vd and yet he is the famous one. Not you. Where is your credibility? I love all the people who forever criticize everything and everyone and sound so bitter.

    • @holahola-gp6vd
      @holahola-gp6vd 4 года назад +4

      @@waitwhat6882 look,there was nothing bitter about my comment.i was not saying anything personal about the guy.i was talking only about his predictions,wich alot of times where really out of reality touch.
      people who may criticize someone doesn't necessarily mean that they are bitter. there is nothing wrong about saying the truth,especially if it was said technically.
      is your world view so narrow that every critical comment someone will make,makes him bitter or hater?

    • @StoicHacker
      @StoicHacker 2 года назад

      @@holahola-gp6vd you shouldn't work in the field.

    • @holahola-gp6vd
      @holahola-gp6vd 2 года назад

      @@StoicHacker well i work at the field.and im good.diffrence between me and others is that i can predict better what will happen in the future of a.i.
      I love to argue and bet with my friends at work for long time about certian predictions made and guess what?? I almost always right.
      Exactly like i was right about self driving cars way back at 2013 when evrybody was sure that by 2020 we will see level 5 autonomous cars and most will be sleeping on there way to work.get in the real world.

  • @skoolboymyk
    @skoolboymyk 3 года назад

    I love this

  • @Denosophem
    @Denosophem 3 месяца назад +1

    You can use someone else's copyright ©️ work as long as they are given credit for it directly and there name stated as a contributor on the work. The fact that our literal work is being stolen directly and used to implement updates amongst many other computer companies direct revenue growth is a clear violation of law and constitutional rights directly relating to anti slavery and anti servitude enough said.

  • @AmeerFazal
    @AmeerFazal 5 лет назад +1

    Thanks a lot!

  • @pawl1092
    @pawl1092 3 месяца назад

    Holy shit the guy in half life is real.

    • @TT-kp5tp
      @TT-kp5tp 25 дней назад +1

      Your two brain cells are firing.

  • @badhombre4942
    @badhombre4942 3 года назад +2

    Brilliant, though he misjudged the importance of maths.

    • @awenir
      @awenir 2 года назад +5

      As a mathmatician... no, he did not. He pointed out its flaws and you do not agree. Different than misjudging.

    • @Wanderlust246
      @Wanderlust246 Год назад +1

      @@awenirlove this answer

  • @johnqpublic2718
    @johnqpublic2718 2 года назад

    WGBH Boston

  • @fitmesslife
    @fitmesslife 10 месяцев назад +1

    Abstractionism 101

  • @davidwilkie9551
    @davidwilkie9551 2 года назад

    Cause-effect Quantum-fields conglomerations in/of QM-TIME Completeness Actuality implies that embodiment manifestation is basically the Antenna of AM-FM time-timing modulation sync-duration-integration Communication in pulse-evolution.., ie no separation of conscious awareness of mind and body only probabilistic correlations in superimposed density-intensity at the individual Quiescent floating point coherence-cohesion module-ation for the unique in uniqueness state-of-mind we affect holistically.

  • @elamaru9355
    @elamaru9355 2 года назад

    so who are you if you let go of all thoughts

  • @awenir
    @awenir 2 года назад +1

    I am a bit disappointed on his approach to spirituality. That's just sad, you can't measure it with instruments so there is nothing like that existent. Yeah, it ain't that simple. And I come from a scientific angle, rather, I love science. Alas, I will not deny the limits of measureability as an argument to prove something possibly non-physical exists or not. I refer to the knowledge argument, which one should look up. Another thing that reminds me of this is the problem of dark matter. Which might actually be a glitch in our physical model of the universe.
    RIP Marv.

    • @sup.blud.
      @sup.blud. Год назад

      You think that someone who invented new technological ideas you'd think he would understand that there is always the possibly of such an instrument not existing _YET_

    • @silence8806
      @silence8806 14 дней назад

      "...That's just sad, you can't measure it with instruments so there is nothing like that existent. Yeah, it ain't that simple...."
      That is what you have heard. His statement was not about spirituality itself, but people who claim to know something without having something else to put forward than their claim about spirits outside of anything that interact with the world we live in. Also, he did not make a claim about being not existant. That does not even make sense.
      And no, dark matter is not a "glitch", but a limit of the standard model, that scientists are very aware about. Physicists can even quantify this limit or error, that you call a "glitch".
      Btw, science or nature does not owe you satisfaction or to make you happy.

  • @cybco
    @cybco 2 года назад

    Did Marvin totally miss out on music, on language, and on art? What the heck?
    Just taking into consideration that of language, clearly is a computerized methodology (process) of capturing and describing complex events only not on the scale of the computerized processing.
    Computers only changed the speed, accuracy and scale. It didn't invent anything new!!!! The next quantum leap prior to the transistor was the printing press, then audio and video recording all of which were computerized ways of capturing processes dynamically with a higher degree of complexity.
    Had he said, only since 1950 the capturing and processing of processes have never before happened on the degree that computers allow, then yes, I would agree.

    • @silence8806
      @silence8806 14 дней назад

      A piece of Music and a piece of Art is not a process. Also Language itself is not a process. Of course, there were things like recipes. People interchanged these recipes how to make things. You could call that a process. But there are reasons, why Ada Lovelace is called the first programmer, even though the hardware back then did not even exist. Before the 1950s, there was no one who thought about processes itself being used as kinds of building blocks. Minsky explains it in this interview.

  • @WebsterMildred-r9r
    @WebsterMildred-r9r 2 месяца назад

    White Dorothy Hernandez Jeffrey Gonzalez Donna

  • @kedonsiemen
    @kedonsiemen 8 месяцев назад

    1:08:23

  • @edimalo7061
    @edimalo7061 4 года назад +5

    The way his eyes dart around is a little creepy😬😬

    • @fairweatherfriends.
      @fairweatherfriends. 3 года назад +1

      Yeah there’s some rumors about him unfortunately.

    • @edimalo7061
      @edimalo7061 3 года назад +1

      @@quantum_ocean I find it creepy you don’t think the way his eyes dart around is creepy😂

    • @christopherhamilton3621
      @christopherhamilton3621 3 года назад +1

      That’s called projection, Edimalo. Look it up…

    • @craigslitzer4857
      @craigslitzer4857 2 года назад +2

      He's probably looking at each person in the room. Making eye contact with the camera man, the interviewer, and the sound man.

    • @Crypt0Band1t
      @Crypt0Band1t 2 года назад +3

      When one gives solutions (answers) to questions, some folk process questions as images in space (in their mind, with their physical eyes moving - which is in your statement). Common answers (an average person would give) don't require much thought, the answers he's giving require an above average level of abstraction (as far as I can guess) mentally. So it's just a matter of course that when he's modifying an abstract answer in his mind to answer the interviewers question, the dude eyes are moving - it's all good, the guys answers are on point. Some, if not most people don't do that but that's okay. :)

  • @raznatovicanastasija
    @raznatovicanastasija 5 месяцев назад

    About Minsky and neural nets: ruclips.net/video/L71cehW1_1g/видео.html