On modelling the emergence of logical thinking
This addresses the problem of building artificial general intelligence by focusing on logical thinking, but it is incremental as it builds on existing theories without new empirical evidence.
The paper argues that current machine learning systems are limited to narrow tasks and lack true understanding, proposing to model the emergence of logical thinking based on Piaget's theory of cognitive development, but provides no concrete results or numbers.
Recent progress in machine learning techniques have revived interest in building artificial general intelligence using these particular tools. There has been a tremendous success in applying them for narrow intellectual tasks such as pattern recognition, natural language processing and playing Go. The latter application vastly outperforms the strongest human player in recent years. However, these tasks are formalized by people in such ways that it has become "easy" for automated recipes to find better solutions than humans do. In the sense of John Searle's Chinese Room Argument, the computer playing Go does not actually understand anything from the game. Thinking like a human mind requires to go beyond the curve fitting paradigm of current systems. There is a fundamental limit to what they can achieve currently as only very specific problem formalization can increase their performances in particular tasks. In this paper, we argue than one of the most important aspects of the human mind is its capacity for logical thinking, which gives rise to many intellectual expressions that differentiate us from animal brains. We propose to model the emergence of logical thinking based on Piaget's theory of cognitive development.