Richard Feynman: Can Machines Think?

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  • čas přidán 15. 04. 2024
  • This is a Q&A excerpt on the topic of AI from a lecture by Richard Feynman from September 26th, 1985.
    This is a clip on the Lex Clips channel that I mostly use to post video clips from the Artificial Intelligence podcast, but occasionally I post favorite clips from lectures given by others. Hope you find these interesting, thought-provoking, and inspiring. If you do, please subscribe, click bell icon, and share!
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Komentáře • 2,4K

  • @LexClips
    @LexClips  Před 4 lety +625

    This is a Q&A excerpt on the topic of AI from a lecture by Richard Feynman from September 26th, 1985. I found it very interesting and hope you do as well. Watch the full lecture in the description. Subscribe to this channel for more clips.

    • @adrianaadnan7704
      @adrianaadnan7704 Před 4 lety +5

      Tq for uploading this sad lex😁
      Appreciate it.

    • @mytelevisionisdead
      @mytelevisionisdead Před 3 lety +2

      @Vendicar Kahn unfortunately I don't know but am interested so will follow this thread

    • @mickmartin4681
      @mickmartin4681 Před 3 lety +8

      Chomsky says that's like asking if submarines swim. You wanna call that swimming? Fine.

    • @rogerkapp3721
      @rogerkapp3721 Před 3 lety +1

      Very appreciated, tx.
      So strange to watch a (science) fiction ... from the future.

    • @mirroredname3389
      @mirroredname3389 Před 3 lety +3

      Heh, i saw a feynman video, immediate flytrap for my mind. and added bonus its you posting it. Thank you. Love your work. Have you looked into the impact of autocorrecting software for text, and how it may actually change the mind of the typist to better suit the corrector. If slow moving object suddenly is closer. Are you sure it was not like that maybe, a month ago. Or what was the median of language before auto correct? Is it better to choose a word suggested or spend more time manually typing your own "words" I think humanity is mistepping in this obscure observation. Auto corrected out of the correct voice that uniquely is you. And eventually the whole of all yous. We, or us if you like. I did not expect to be concerned about this. But I am.

  • @ccandantube
    @ccandantube Před 3 měsíci +44

    It is amazing he has explained how today’s AI (ChatGPT and others) work and also their weaknesses with two questions in 1985. Today, we need him more than anyone else

  • @mrnarason
    @mrnarason Před 4 lety +682

    Never seen Richard Feynman in a T-shirt before

    • @zombieinjeans
      @zombieinjeans Před 3 lety +17

      I want that shirt.

    • @Kage1128
      @Kage1128 Před 3 lety +2

      Where can i buy that shirt

    • @vatsan2483
      @vatsan2483 Před 3 lety +6

      @@gokurocks9 he was actually the DUDE of all scientist 😎😎😎

    • @BrandonAdamPhotography
      @BrandonAdamPhotography Před 3 lety +10

      This is pretty much how I picture him being all the time. If you haven’t read it yet you should check out his book “Surely You’re Joking, Mr. Feynman”. It’s an autobiographical look at his shenanigans and it’s hilarious and intriguing.

    • @vatsan2483
      @vatsan2483 Před 3 lety

      @@BrandonAdamPhotography I am actually a Feynman geek so those all actually read it quite inside out.. more liking for Feynman as a person as important as a scientist to me..

  • @bibiayube677
    @bibiayube677 Před 2 lety +339

    The fact i have access to this man lectures and interviews that i am truly grateful for

    • @stinger4712
      @stinger4712 Před 2 lety +7

      CZcams: you're welcome.

    • @d1dac0
      @d1dac0 Před 5 měsíci +1

      @@stinger4712 Thanks CZcams, very intelligent of you.

    • @RoqueMatusIII
      @RoqueMatusIII Před měsícem

      not intelligent yet
      @@d1dac0

  • @K.F-R
    @K.F-R Před rokem +301

    "The necessary weaknesses of intelligence."
    Even his throw-away observations and quips can be pure timeless genius.
    Thanks for sharing.

    • @vhawk1951kl
      @vhawk1951kl Před rokem

      He had no idea or experience of what intelligence is, but perhaps he does now; intelligence is to men (human beings) what flying is to bricks-they cannot experience it as-they-are; asleep-or just dreamers

    • @klaxoncow
      @klaxoncow Před 11 měsíci +25

      Indeed, I've worked with AI and this is a point that I think escapes a lot of people.
      Intelligence, by its nature, is intrinsically flawed.
      Because to reason at higher and higher levels - which is a characteristic of intelligent thought - we're further and further abstracting away the fine details.
      Which is good on the one hand, of course, but it's also potentially bad. Because, as the saying reminds us, often "the Devil is in the details".
      Machines give perfect mathematical results. The more and more we make AI "human-like" in intelligence, the more mistakes it's going to make.
      And the crucial point is that this is intrinsic to what we're doing, not a failure of hardware or software. But an intrinsic failure of intelligence itself - to detect patterns, I must abstract. Through abstraction, I'm throwing away fine detail.
      But, you know: Chaos Theory. Fine detail is oftentimes crucial to accurate prediction and results.
      When the machine is asked to do maths, then it does so perfectly.
      But when the machine is asked to cast a value judgement over some patterns it's detected in inherently ambiguous language to predict the course of an inherently "fuzzy" real world out there... it'll start making mistakes. It will not be perfect anymore.
      As it's our great unique ability - and we love to flatter ourselves - humans often miss these subtleties of how our intelligence is a trade-off.
      "To err is to be human", as the saying goes.
      Well, I'd revise it to "to err is to be intelligent" and we must expect that the machines, in increasing their intelligence, will become... less trustworthy and reliable in their results.
      Don't get me wrong. Still incredibly valuable and to be pursued, and will be pursued to good and great effect.
      But just, you know, "manage your expectations".

    • @relate
      @relate Před 9 měsíci +1

      @@klaxoncow I think he meant it as a joke about us recognizing computers showing intelligence by means of human laziness thanks to our design. Intelligence trying to use itself to scheme a more efficient or "lazy" way to do or not do something. Or as he put it, "If you want to create an intelligent machine you're going to get all kinds of crazy ways of avoiding labour." The weakness is our schemes to avoid work and its necessity is our relief. Side note, saying intelligence is intrinsically flawed seems like a gigantic philosophically arbitrary statement.

    • @jgunther3398
      @jgunther3398 Před 8 měsíci

      @@klaxoncow a dumb person isn't "more human" than a smart one. the humanlikeness of an ai isn't measured by its mistakes

    • @klaxoncow
      @klaxoncow Před 8 měsíci +1

      @@jgunther3398 Yeah, I said nothing like what you're trying to abstract it down to, and I never made any reference to anyone or anything being "dumb" or "smart" whatsoever.
      But I thank you for providing demonstrative proof of what I was saying.
      Your intelligence has abstracted what you think I said and, unfortunately, lost much of the crucial "fine detail" in actually comprehending what I was really saying.
      Which has lead you to error, in characterising my position with a strawman.
      And, no, that's not because you're "dumb", it's actually because you have intelligence. An ability to abstract, summarise, pull the wheat from the chaff, etc.
      I mean, in this case, I'd challenge you've actually done it incorrectly. But it is a characteristic of intelligence itself that you could do it at all.
      As AI becomes more human-like, expect it to start failing similar cognitive hurdles as well.

  • @HecmarJayam
    @HecmarJayam Před 3 lety +2026

    Richard Feynman was born in a world where horses were still the most common mode of transportation in cities and here is he, telling about AI concepts we are still struggling to apply today. Also, he was one of the greatest theoretical physicist in history.

    • @steveroger4570
      @steveroger4570 Před 3 lety +215

      Err.. car was already common that time. And many AI concepts were old, it is only popular now because recent tech is power enough to implement those theory, also partially due to marketing and buzzwords like (Machine learning AI Pro Plus xxx phone AI Blockchain) that make people think these are somehow new idea.

    • @HecmarJayam
      @HecmarJayam Před 3 lety +90

      @@steveroger4570 There is actual footage of new york in the year he was born. If you are going to argue with that, I don't want to waste time refuting the rest of your comment.

    • @matthewronson5218
      @matthewronson5218 Před 3 lety +42

      Born:
      Richard Phillips Feynman, May 11, 1918, New York City, U.S.

    • @ripfire4
      @ripfire4 Před 3 lety +55

      zenmeister451 I see a few horse carriages in the photo you linked. Model T's mass production was only a few years prior to the year of his birth. So, yes, I would say horse/carriage was still prevalent at the time regardless of the photo you showed. By mid 20s I think would be the time cars take over horse carriages.

    • @zenmeister451
      @zenmeister451 Před 3 lety +17

      @@ripfire4 I never said that horses were not prevalent. That was not the point. I also said that in rural areas and other towns horses were still being used. I was just showing how prevalent cars were in New York at the time. The pic I sent shows a virtual sea of cars.

  • @rionshikder813
    @rionshikder813 Před 3 lety +892

    I live in Bangladesh and because of the crappy education system here I'm stuck with studying business studies. I didn't have physics or chemistry in school level but I love physics and Feynman has been a big part of that. His lectures on physics have been a great respite from my pointless and ultimately futile existence. I left my job to study physics by myself and have gotten derailed. But every time I listen to this man talk, I am enamored to pick up a physics or a math book and bang my head against that wall as hard as I can.
    I hope someday I get to be a physicist of any caliber, even if it means I have to starve to death. Thank you, Mr Feynman, for being the light I wish to touch someday.

    • @Pedro14ceara
      @Pedro14ceara Před 3 lety +101

      From Brazil, the otherside of the world, just passing by to say that I am cheering and hoping you make it!

    • @rionshikder813
      @rionshikder813 Před 3 lety +35

      @@Pedro14ceara Thank you for the kind words

    • @4zafinc
      @4zafinc Před rokem +14

      Asha kori apni ekhono lege achen, Bhai. Ei level er passion britha jaye na

    • @JeremyMcMillan
      @JeremyMcMillan Před rokem +19

      If you keep doing what you love, and that progressively improves your abilities, persistence will eventually make you better than the conventional physicist. First, develop the discipline to improve step by step. Then step by step towards your dreams. This comment is two years old to me. How are things going?

    • @marsbase3729
      @marsbase3729 Před rokem +11

      Dude, don't give up! 👍😎👍

  • @Bd951
    @Bd951 Před 2 lety +1805

    I like the fact that he's brilliant but talks like a 70s NYC cab driver.

    • @goobytron2888
      @goobytron2888 Před 2 lety +197

      That’s when you know someone is really smart. They can speak about complex things in simple language.

    • @koshka02
      @koshka02 Před 2 lety +159

      I have a Calculus prof at my University who teaches just like that.
      Best professor I ever had and damn near aced all 3 of my Calculus courses cause of him.
      Having a charismatic professor will literally change your life.

    • @poisonthrumyveins
      @poisonthrumyveins Před 2 lety +57

      That’s part of his charm with his new york accent

    • @westcoastkidd17
      @westcoastkidd17 Před 2 lety +28

      Born and bred in Brooklyn!

    • @influentia1patterns
      @influentia1patterns Před 2 lety +4

      It’s Colin Quinn.

  • @Ayra_Is_Cool_lol
    @Ayra_Is_Cool_lol Před 2 lety +110

    Reminds me of that scene from I, Robot :
    Spooner : "Can a machine write a symphony? Can a machine turn a canvas into a beautiful masterpiece?"
    Sonny : "Can you?"

    • @kosmic2615
      @kosmic2615 Před 2 lety +2

      With the right definitions, it can.

    • @kosmic2615
      @kosmic2615 Před 2 lety

      ​@@papesldjnsjkfjsn Ignorance is a bliss

    • @papesldjnsjkfjsn
      @papesldjnsjkfjsn Před 2 lety

      @@kosmic2615 bruh im so sorry i read it "with the right definitions, *I* can"

    • @thelifeaquatica
      @thelifeaquatica Před 2 lety

      Symphony? Yes it can: czcams.com/video/03xMIcYiB80/video.html

    • @tylerhaddock9583
      @tylerhaddock9583 Před 2 lety

      @@thelifeaquatica Is that hot garbage supposed to be the best AI can do?

  • @auroraborealis13579
    @auroraborealis13579 Před 4 lety +1000

    CheeTAH

  • @SolvingTheMoneyProblem
    @SolvingTheMoneyProblem Před 3 lety +822

    Love Feynman.

    • @keerthivasanb7931
      @keerthivasanb7931 Před 3 lety +2

      Great knowing you watch Lex Fridman channels

    • @AlphaCrucis
      @AlphaCrucis Před 3 lety +7

      Fancy seeing you here.

    • @jeffin8029
      @jeffin8029 Před 3 lety +8

      THIS MATTERS🤣🤣

    • @remboldt
      @remboldt Před 3 lety +1

      Not surprised to find you here as well bro!

    • @dzlfiqar
      @dzlfiqar Před 3 lety +1

      You r everwhere on my youtube algo dude

  • @generichuman_
    @generichuman_ Před 2 lety +249

    1985 and he was already intimately aware of the alignment problem in A.I. Every time there is a new breakthrough, I always go back to Feynman's lectures and realize he had been saying it all along.

    • @LVenn
      @LVenn Před rokem +13

      At his time he already had thought about perverse instantiation. That's crazy

    • @jimihendrixx11
      @jimihendrixx11 Před rokem +6

      Last genius

    • @_yiannis
      @_yiannis Před rokem +20

      There's this guy called Alan Turing, he talked about this in a paper in 1950

    • @generichuman_
      @generichuman_ Před rokem +8

      @@_yiannis Pretty sure everyone here knows who Alan Turing is lol, but yes, he broached this subject as well

    • @itoibo4208
      @itoibo4208 Před rokem +3

      people, still today, are poo pooing on AI, saying it will never do this and never do that. They never learn XD

  • @roblarssen249
    @roblarssen249 Před 2 lety +84

    it is astonishing to me that this was off the cuff and 40 years ago, yet Feynman's comments are unbelievably prescient and resonate still with any AI researcher today 40 years later

    • @Dowlphin
      @Dowlphin Před rokem +4

      We could also interpret that as showing how little we put6 own effort into human evolution.
      E.g. when someone says: "This calamity is gonna happen in 40 years" and in 40 years that is what is happening, you could say that's an amazing prophecy, but you could also say that's a shameful example of humankind's folly.

    • @halweilbrenner9926
      @halweilbrenner9926 Před 6 měsíci

      A brilliant thinker

  • @cristina-dianasavin4468
    @cristina-dianasavin4468 Před 3 lety +858

    11:33 The way the audience reacted when he told them he doesn't have time to tell them more is priceless. It marks the difference between the vast majority of teachers and the ones that soak their students with... "the pleasure of finding things out". Too bad we don't hear the often in class. Great man, great educator. Beautiful lecture.

    • @Marendra-Nodi
      @Marendra-Nodi Před 3 lety

      @SteppenWolff100 Correct!

    • @samueljele
      @samueljele Před 3 lety +12

      @SteppenWolff100 the interesting question though is why "most highscool and college students" dont see "finding hings out" as a pleasure. Are there really kids who are more curios than others? Maybe, but I'm sure almost everyone has something he is curios about. If, for example, you put one of the best artists at this time in front of the very same audience, would they listen to him with same interest as to Fenyman? I would like to believe that as soon as someone finds his passion, he is just as involved in learning new things as those students are in their respective field.

    • @mortenlu
      @mortenlu Před 3 lety

      @SteppenWolff100 interesting insight from across the world. Thanks.

    • @mortenlu
      @mortenlu Před 3 lety +7

      @Karan K why? Religion teaches nothing of how the world works.

    • @mortenlu
      @mortenlu Před 3 lety +3

      @Karan K That's very nice. Except that none of them do. So there is that. But hey, why bother with facts when you have alternative facts?

  • @NicholasKujawa
    @NicholasKujawa Před 3 lety +304

    You know the age-old question: "If you could bring back someone from the past for a day to have dinner with?" Feynman is one of my answers. His ability to bring complex concepts into an easily understood analogy is a skill I envy. What a beautiful mind.

    • @MarcCastellsBallesta
      @MarcCastellsBallesta Před 3 lety +3

      Minds like his are the ones that should be kept in the jars from Futurama.

    • @Dee-Eddy
      @Dee-Eddy Před 2 lety +6

      @Bob You gotta stop being such a sports guy, man.

    • @mattjames4978
      @mattjames4978 Před rokem +2

      You’re assuming he’d want dinner with you. 😉

    • @GozerTheGozerian
      @GozerTheGozerian Před rokem +10

      Steve Jobs isn't even in the same realm as Feynman.

    • @manamsetty2664
      @manamsetty2664 Před rokem

      @@mattjames4978 yes he would have dinner, he just couldn't stop talking

  • @TheSonicWafflez
    @TheSonicWafflez Před 3 lety +194

    the way he thinks and explains things makes it so compelling to listen to. almost like he's telling a story. such a legend

    • @Jeff-66
      @Jeff-66 Před 11 měsíci +11

      There's actually a technique of explaining named after him ... "The Feynman Technique".
      The Feynman Technique is a method of learning or studying that was famously used by physicist Richard Feynman. Known for his ability to explain complex topics in simple, intuitive ways, Feynman created a method for learning that involves four basic steps:
      1. **Choose a Concept**: Choose the concept or topic you want to understand and start studying it. Once you know what it is about, take a piece of paper and write the name of the concept at the top of the page.
      2. **Teach it to a Child**: Write out an explanation of the concept on your page as if you were teaching it to a child. Not just any child, but a child who is old enough to understand basic terms and relationships, but is still a beginner in terms of the topic. Use simple language and avoid jargon. Make sure your explanation is so simple that even a child can understand it.
      3. **Identify Gaps and Go Back to The Source Material**: When you pinpoint the areas where you struggle (where you forgot something important, weren't able to explain it, or simply have a shaky understanding), go back to the source material and re-learn it until you have a basic understanding.
      4. **Review and Simplify (Optional)**: If you followed the first three steps and are able to explain the concept in simple terms, you’re done. If you want to be sure of your understanding, you can try to simplify your explanation even more or try to explain it to an actual child or a peer.
      The Feynman Technique exploits the fact that teaching is one of the most powerful ways to learn and solidify your understanding of a concept. By pretending to teach the concept to someone else, you can identify gaps in your understanding. And by simplifying the concept to the level of a child, you're forced to really understand the concept at a deeper level.

    • @Spyron_
      @Spyron_ Před 10 měsíci +2

      His perspective of looking at universe and life is beautiful

    • @Eyes-of-Horus
      @Eyes-of-Horus Před 7 měsíci +1

      He said that if you can't explain a concept or idea simply you don't understand it. Isn't this a problem with many college and university professors?

    • @archlich4489
      @archlich4489 Před 6 měsíci

      Very high charisma to go with that knowledge

    • @RC_Engineering
      @RC_Engineering Před 6 měsíci

      ​@@Jeff-66interesting use of chat gpt for this summary

  • @venkatchait007
    @venkatchait007 Před rokem +33

    I read Feynman's book and his genius is apparent on every page, my biggest takeaway was that he never let his curiosity fade his entire life.

  • @TheAIEpiphany
    @TheAIEpiphany Před 3 lety +991

    I guess Feynman would be really happy to know that we've found the paradigm to solve these computer vision tasks he mentioned using deep learning.

    • @wiseguy8828
      @wiseguy8828 Před 3 lety +110

      Yeah I was thinking it would be cool to see his reaction to today’s tech - vision processing and machine learning and AI. He’s be proud. But he pretty much predicts it all when he said “it’s really hard to come up with a problem that computers won’t ever solve”’

    • @piotrnod6489
      @piotrnod6489 Před 3 lety +39

      Or maybe he would be worried ;)

    • @patrickinternational
      @patrickinternational Před 3 lety +29

      They already had found that back when he gave this lecture, it just took longer.

    • @bigphatballllz
      @bigphatballllz Před 3 lety +56

      Putting my one dime to the idea. I think he would have laughed at the idea of using a black box called "Neural Network" to find patterns in a way that the person who built it didn't understand it himself. He seems to be the kind of person who likes well-defined things we understand more than the mess that deep learning is right now!

    • @patrickinternational
      @patrickinternational Před 3 lety +68

      @@bigphatballllz The concept of a neural network was first described mathematically in 1873, Feynman for sure knew what they were.

  • @davehank1767
    @davehank1767 Před 4 lety +369

    17:49 "We are getting close to intelligent machines but they're showing the necessary weaknesses of intelligence" 👍🤖

    • @benjamin17
      @benjamin17 Před 3 lety

      @@HironikSpear47 cool

    • @hans-joachimbierwirth4727
      @hans-joachimbierwirth4727 Před 3 lety +2

      @@HironikSpear47 not the case.

    • @hulldragon
      @hulldragon Před 3 lety

      @Karan K *You* are nothing but a JOKE.

    • @kevinhall3188
      @kevinhall3188 Před 2 lety

      because the machine is being programmed by humans.....just making it quicker to calculate only aspects covered. A machine can never invent only a man's inate ingenuity can....

    • @swig_gigolo
      @swig_gigolo Před 2 lety +1

      Didn’t Steve Jobs say he payed attention to lazy workers cause they found the most efficient way to do things

  • @Eleuthero5
    @Eleuthero5 Před 8 měsíci +2

    I read "Surely you must be joking, Mr. Feynman". What a life!! His physics lecture series is worth more than gold. I actually like his New York accent!!

  • @zarowny
    @zarowny Před rokem +70

    The man took an encore in a lecture. Extreme charisma and fundamental knowledge of so many different concepts and fields. A true polymath.

  • @algolin
    @algolin Před 8 měsíci +7

    Feynman was not only a great physicist, thinker in general, but also a showman. There's art in it. The closest to me is a stand up comedian. But he was not telling only jokes, but presenting complicated ideas in a simple way.

  • @ericmiller6056
    @ericmiller6056 Před 3 lety +78

    An interviewer once asked Claude Shannon (the creator of Information Theory): "Could a machine think?" He replied: "Well, of course! I'm a machine, and I think, don't I?"
    The point is that this question has more to do with our definition of "machine" than with any particular assessment of what kinds of systems can possess what kinds of intelligence.

    • @bytgfdsw2
      @bytgfdsw2 Před 10 měsíci +1

      Claude Shannon is one of the most underrated scientists in modern times. At Berkeley, 3 graduate classes were devoted to Shannon’s research at MIT alone on information theory

    • @jgunther3398
      @jgunther3398 Před 8 měsíci

      feynman gave a solid argument that jet engines will never be able to think 🙂

    • @ericmiller6056
      @ericmiller6056 Před 8 měsíci +1

      @@jgunther3398 😄😂Yes, exactly! And that, of course, was Shannon's point: If by "machine" we always mean something that has the same level of internal complexity and interactivity with its environment that a jet engine does, then, of course, a "machine" can never think.

    • @ThePantygun
      @ThePantygun Před 7 měsíci

      "A machine" is not "50 machines."

  • @thetruthexperiment
    @thetruthexperiment Před 6 měsíci +2

    He’s so thoughtful. “You didn’t do that” if i had asked that question and got that answer without that “you didnt do that” i would have felt like Richard didnt like me for the rest of my life.

  • @Mackinstyle
    @Mackinstyle Před 7 měsíci +1

    The thing that consistently blows me away, every time I hear him discuss something, is not necessarily his opinions on the matter, or his logic, but how he structures a response. How he makes a case.

  • @kensonlama
    @kensonlama Před 3 lety +198

    Feynman would've LOVED modern computing had he still been alive today. Machine learning, neural networks, etc.

    • @NightTimeDay
      @NightTimeDay Před 3 lety +11

      I wish I could hear him speak on GPT-3

    • @23kl104
      @23kl104 Před 3 lety +21

      Then again, in a different video he speaks about pseudoscience and non-verifiable statements. Machine Learning has A LOT of that. That part, I'm certain, he would not like.

    • @OffTheBeatenPath_
      @OffTheBeatenPath_ Před 3 lety +10

      Neural networks were used back in the 50's

    • @robertpirsig5011
      @robertpirsig5011 Před 3 lety +11

      Not sure he would have would love it. ML finds lots of correlations between things but can't explain them and sometimes the connections are not even related just strangely correlated. It can give hints at things but it can't explain anything without human judgement. Seeing that something has a co incidental relation without explanation isn't really science.

    • @Bhangshot
      @Bhangshot Před 2 lety +1

      @@OffTheBeatenPath_ yes but they didn’t have the speed and computing power we have now. Computers were simply too slow back then to see the benefits which we are now discovering.

  • @dr.mikeybee
    @dr.mikeybee Před 3 lety +63

    "The third year he wasn't allowed to play anymore." LOL!

  • @pariveshplayson
    @pariveshplayson Před rokem +47

    Prescient. I am an AI researcher and am
    marveling at how accurate in his assessment he was so many years ago!

    • @Dowlphin
      @Dowlphin Před rokem

      Provocative thesis: It's nothing special. 😉
      Many people have made accurate predictions based on simply understanding the systems of fools.
      And that's just the people you know about because they compromised with the system. Imagine what realms of understanding people can reach if they don't make their enlightenment dependent on status quo support.
      ● The Buddha is revered, and so many people who are very revered to a large degree merely repeat what the Buddha said.
      ● Few people call Karl Marx a prophet. ... Maybe because he expected people to understand what he said instead of just worship it. But he basically explained what would happen, for certain, inevitably, and it's not that difficult to understand why, but it is hard to overcome a belief system that wants to deny that understanding in order to protect itself.

    • @mrcellophane226
      @mrcellophane226 Před rokem

      @@Dowlphin it is

    • @toriless
      @toriless Před rokem

      Which pictures feature a bridge.

    • @michaelsamson5767
      @michaelsamson5767 Před 9 měsíci

      ​@@Dowlphin hey man try to predict what will happen inthe future and you know intelligent he is

    • @Toy1er
      @Toy1er Před 8 měsíci

      ​@@DowlphinGo take a shower you filthy Brony. You aren't smart.

  • @mohammadosman6106
    @mohammadosman6106 Před 11 měsíci +7

    We gotta admit some humans are gifted and special. This dude was light years ahead of his times.

  • @beaconterraoneonline
    @beaconterraoneonline Před 3 lety +173

    We need about 10,000 Richard Feynman’s teaching students today.

    • @villeharju2207
      @villeharju2207 Před 3 lety +13

      Right now we have 0, so we need about 10,000 more

    • @techwithdave
      @techwithdave Před 3 lety +10

      Most of the best are on CZcams 🙂

    • @jerryanstey7058
      @jerryanstey7058 Před 3 lety +1

      Teaching what ?

    • @Alistair
      @Alistair Před 3 lety +10

      we need teachers with spines. He defines things clearly and in a no nonsense way, which is pretty much the antithesis of the level of discourse in 2020. Everything has to be obfuscated and twisted to fit political narratives now, and anyone that asks questions is a heretic to be burned at the stake

    • @raspas99
      @raspas99 Před 3 lety

      And yet if parents thoughts their children even more than they do today to be decent human beings the progress in one generation would be higher than 10,000 Feynman could do in hundred Generations. Or maybe not. Richard would know the answer :D

  • @lostboy583
    @lostboy583 Před 3 lety +55

    I’m gonna have to watch this again so I can go back and count how many times he tried to stick his glasses in a pocket that wasn’t there. The trouble with T-shirts

    • @efisgpr
      @efisgpr Před 3 lety +8

      Wait until you find out about t-shirts with pockets.

    • @abyteuser6297
      @abyteuser6297 Před 2 lety

      @@efisgpr what? is there such a thing???!!!!

    • @shyshka_
      @shyshka_ Před 2 lety +1

      @@efisgpr that has to be illegal

  • @Grassmanian
    @Grassmanian Před 2 lety +18

    The way he repeatedly used the word "present" when describing the computers of his time makes me think that he was smart enough to predict that in the future there may be people watching this who's computers can do some of the things he said are difficult with ease.

  • @ivancota9762
    @ivancota9762 Před 8 měsíci +1

    incredible that this was filmed 40 years ago, and he got just about everything right. basically tells us that the fundamental computational theory is still viable in terms of what machines can and cannot do

    • @ivancota9762
      @ivancota9762 Před 8 měsíci +1

      16:33 damn, even the bugs are the same 😂

  • @chessdominos
    @chessdominos Před 3 lety +12

    What a fantastic person he was.
    Such a great gift.

  • @publicshared1780
    @publicshared1780 Před rokem +11

    I love this man. His joy in explaining things always makes me smile

  • @souprememc
    @souprememc Před 2 lety +11

    Hearing Wolfram talk about how smart Feynman was and working on quantum computers with him decades ago was crazy fascinating.

  • @stephena.sheehan9959
    @stephena.sheehan9959 Před 3 lety +51

    Great clip. Richard Feynman's work on the Challenger disaster and his criticism of the US educational system are important parts of his public work. He was also part of the Manhattan Project and has some interesting thoughts about that. I wish we had more people like him around today. Of course we stand in awe of his work on QED.

    • @Dowlphin
      @Dowlphin Před rokem +1

      We likely have many people like that today, but the centralization of power of the US-capitalist-imperialist domination over global affairs conditions societal organization into fixating on fewer and fewer individuals, in part as an expression of fear-driven scarcity imposed, and so those few 'preachers' might still be an expression of the problem.
      If you want more people like that around, you have to realign attention and support onto the many others who are on that level and maybe even beyond because they didn't focus effort on self-promotion. (Selfishness tends to limit holistic intelligence. - Or in simpler terms as my teaching mantra: "Fear makes stupid.")

    • @m74d3
      @m74d3 Před rokem

      ​@Dowlphwin show us on the doll where the US-capitalist-imperialists touched you. You're safe here.

  • @EnricoRos
    @EnricoRos Před 3 lety +22

    5:13 Jumpscare! I seriously thought this was coming out of the TV

    • @BradyBoll
      @BradyBoll Před 3 lety

      yeah but... I mean... not bad huh

  • @zaknefain100
    @zaknefain100 Před rokem +2

    Never had the pleasure of meeting this man... but love him immensely. Thanks for uploading these.

  • @EeekiE
    @EeekiE Před 6 měsíci +1

    It’s crazy now that a machine could learn to recognise patterns and identify people based on their gait, or the back of their head.
    He was right at the time-and he did say at the present time.

  • @jacksonzheng3103
    @jacksonzheng3103 Před 3 lety +206

    Feynmann: Jack's face is different
    Convolution Neural Networks: hold my beer

    • @psy_duck8221
      @psy_duck8221 Před 3 lety +16

      GANs: Now jack looks like Elon Musk.

    • @jacksonzheng3103
      @jacksonzheng3103 Před 3 lety

      @@psy_duck8221 lol

    • @anteconfig5391
      @anteconfig5391 Před 3 lety +2

      These neural networks run on GPUs that can run a large number of algorithms in parallel.

    • @jagerfaxe
      @jagerfaxe Před 3 lety +1

      @@anteconfig5391 A large number of the same algorithm

    • @feyntmistral1110
      @feyntmistral1110 Před 3 lety +4

      @@anteconfig5391 Forget the GPUs, visual recognition can run on a Raspberry Pi.

  • @iantheorem
    @iantheorem Před 3 lety +9

    How things have changed. I love this mans mind and his heart, so brilliant.

  • @mouphasa
    @mouphasa Před 3 lety +6

    Thank you so much for posting this. Feynman was visionary in so many things... Respect!

  • @alanakin9733
    @alanakin9733 Před rokem

    Just happened to come across this 3 years after the post. Thanks so much. For me, this is a reminder. Brilliant people will always be brilliant, for as long as we have recorded what they said.

  • @truezulu
    @truezulu Před 3 lety +21

    A great man. One of the very greatest.

  • @grahamwhite2003
    @grahamwhite2003 Před 4 lety +46

    Lex, thank you for bringing me ideas that I would have otherwise never had. You the man

    • @wiseguy8828
      @wiseguy8828 Před 3 lety +4

      Don’t forget to also thank Feinman.

  • @mukeshsharma-iq8dp
    @mukeshsharma-iq8dp Před 8 měsíci +7

    Poor Prof Feynman didnt know then that facial recognition AI Software would be a reallity 3 decades after this early 80s lecture. His greatest skill beyond exceptional scientists then & now, is that he was incredibly imaginative & a damn good communicator. If you have read his book on Quantum Electrodynamics (QED) with Feynman diagrams.... he made it so simple to understand even for average high school kid. I was so impressed that i got hold of his original 1964 Caltech Lecture notes in Physics....it was not easy as i am from 🇲🇾-Malaysia!!!😅

  • @parasuraman1155
    @parasuraman1155 Před 8 měsíci +1

    Prof. Feynman was one of the most brilliant minds and perhaps the greatest teacher of all time.
    Thanks for the video.

  • @alexp-ru
    @alexp-ru Před 3 lety +168

    1985: The lighting is different, the face is different... 2020: DeepFake "hold my beer"

    • @lukejo7994
      @lukejo7994 Před 3 lety +2

      ew

    • @arjunarun9147
      @arjunarun9147 Před 3 lety +4

      @@lukejo7994 ok

    • @asdfdfggfd
      @asdfdfggfd Před 3 lety +2

      One of the smartest men to ever live had trouble comprehending exponential progression... What hope do I have...

    • @sandipanumbc
      @sandipanumbc Před 2 lety +3

      In fact generative models like GANs can be thought of doing some sort of "thinking" through backpropagation - the discriminator and the generator force each other to think in certain way

    • @leocmen
      @leocmen Před 2 lety +4

      Dude, 8:15 the man was ahead of his time in all senses.

  • @Rsaulen
    @Rsaulen Před 3 lety +22

    Richard Feynman was a man who could to see the future

  • @Trundlecake
    @Trundlecake Před 8 měsíci

    Thank you for re posting!

  • @gregparrott
    @gregparrott Před rokem

    Thanks for posting! Dr. Feynman's talks are absolute treasures.

  • @salarshamchi4744
    @salarshamchi4744 Před 3 lety +3

    He was one of the best -if not the best- teachers in history... I wish I could be in that room, listening to his lectures... What a great man!

    • @jeepien
      @jeepien Před 2 lety

      How do you do strike-throughs?

  • @bernardfinucane2061
    @bernardfinucane2061 Před 3 lety +195

    His point about human intelligence at the beginning is excellent: Humans are not the most intelligent possible things, and there isn't much point in trying to imitate human intelligence, any more than there is a point to building a mechanical cheetah. You can think of things like the youtube algorithm as primitive intelligences with completely different senses than human have, which do things practically impossible for humans. They live in a very different world.
    This seems to totally disagree with Ray Kurzweil, who seems to think that if you make a computer big enough, human emotions will spontaneously emerge. But human emotions are the result of human evolution, why should they emerge from a machine built in a lab?

    • @KRYPTOS_K5
      @KRYPTOS_K5 Před 3 lety +1

      AI cannot be a new species unless it is programmed to be. But I have doubts about that programming possibility in the real world out of any simulation. The reason for my doubt is well known: there is not possible silicon life in the universe. About that Feynman "lero lero" (Brazilian expression) of mechanical cheetah etc etc it reminds me an ancient dinner in the MIT when there we've found Asimov, Searle, Minsk who hastily discussed about future trends of AI issues. Minsk have came to be in almost an argument with Asimov due to the Asimovian perspective on the central aspect of (future) AI. It was a memorable dinner that could be labelled General Intelligence Could Be a Mechanical Chee-tah or Whatever? Searle is still alive. He knows why that title! LoL

    • @mrfumetsu
      @mrfumetsu Před 3 lety

      @@DumbledoreMcCracken To correct you and preach further on your notion ;) - *You know about - czcams.com/video/JM77aTk1XyI/video.html

    • @theBaron0530
      @theBaron0530 Před 3 lety +3

      Pardon me if I think I can infer from your comment, that it's necessary to define "think", to define "intelligence", before making any comparisons. It was an observation I had, as soon as I saw the title of this video-"How can we say that something thinks, without defining first what thinking is?"

    • @cowlinator
      @cowlinator Před 3 lety +6

      Kurzweil doesn't talk about human emotion, just emotion. Many animals with brains, possibly all animals with brains, have emotion. Emotion might be a result of biological brain evolution, or it might be a fundamental component of any optimal solution for general intelligence.

    • @bill8383
      @bill8383 Před 3 lety +1

      @@theBaron0530 That was an interesting "thought".. How could you possibly define something that is 'first order' that literally defines the 'second order' problem space of linguistics for which you are referring to.. It's like the 'simulation' in totality trying to comprehensively define itself , when it lacks the means to 'look in', from outside itself >> because if it had the means to 'see' from outside then it would be "more than simulation" .. A system space, cannot define itself using only itself..
      To think about thining, is a second order operation.. unless you have the ability to 'step outside' your thinking or have something else to reference off, than you cannot define 'thought'.. and if you did find somthing else to "reference off" (sorry about my shitty terminology) then that information is now a product of "your" thinking, therefore unable to define the totality of the system..
      I, dunno.. maybe (??)

  • @sudhakarg8921
    @sudhakarg8921 Před 7 měsíci

    the final example is marvelous

  • @euclidofalexandria3786
    @euclidofalexandria3786 Před 8 měsíci

    thank you for posting!

  • @KRYPTOS_K5
    @KRYPTOS_K5 Před 3 lety +14

    Very interesting. Almost secretly and philosophically he is standing on for a few ideas:
    1) There is no defined general intelligence but different intelligences
    2) The raw materials (carbon vs silicon etc etc) can define the type of intelligence de per se (it was a common belief in 60/70/80)
    3) Heuristics has a problem: the best what it could do for intelligence design is performance or limited context based (and self limited) type of learning -- obviously aiming contextual performance. Therefore machine cannot fully discover valid abductive inferences due to the lack of intrinsic recontextualisation cognitive capacity.
    Basically he was arguing for the fundamental concepts of the MIT during that moment of the American (Anglo Saxon) history of science.
    Sorry for my English. I also like and admire Richard Feynman contents and style.

    • @gamingsportz3390
      @gamingsportz3390 Před 3 lety +3

      Never be sorry for your english, you rather should ask for improvements!

    • @GarrettX001
      @GarrettX001 Před 3 lety +4

      Dude your English is in the top percentile, most natives would have serious trouble understanding what the fuck any of that meant lol. Besides that, yeah that is generally applicable to what he was saying.

    • @KRYPTOS_K5
      @KRYPTOS_K5 Před 3 lety +1

      @@GarrettX001 Thank you for your kindness. I am a Brazilian from a mix of different bloods German, Danish (strong) Oriental Jew (strong) Portuguese etc (all mixed) and despite the fact of different origins we basically only speak Portuguese. Recently I was really cogitatum (well, it is Latim: freely thinking about) to make a CZcams bilingual channel of science in this country with Anglo Saxon (English spoken natives, Americans, British) partners but the fact is that my English is poor. I am still studying a lot. Some really good channel here in Portuguese idiom is very difficult but it is not impossible. There are, say, no more than reasonably good channels here. Maybe I could yield a kind of interview framework (only audio with slide show) channel casted with the bright English spoken scientists of the English spoken peoples of countries like it happens in the Event Horizon, I would guess. It is hard. Google translator doesn't solve many barriers, for instance, in math (yes, math is also spoken during lectures). Google also doesn't have equation search, say, using latex. Those types of educational handicaps and others (more common ones, like good local structure) are harder in countries like Brazil.

  • @Luzt.
    @Luzt. Před 2 lety +3

    RF always brilliant, always entertaining, always with interesting prospective. My Hero.

  • @DirahEvans
    @DirahEvans Před 8 měsíci

    Thank you for sharing. Feynman is one of the Greats. I can listen to him all day everyday . Thanks.

  • @M.-.D
    @M.-.D Před 9 měsíci

    I watched Feynman a few times a year since they turned up archive on the internet.
    Really an incredible mind and a fun teacher.

  • @tajamulbashirnajar6971
    @tajamulbashirnajar6971 Před rokem +3

    The clip ended with a beautiful thought by Feynman " I think we are getting close to intelligent machines but they are showing the necessary weaknesses of intelligence"

  • @oshaya
    @oshaya Před 2 lety +17

    Feynman talked about our inability to build a definite procedure that can “recognize things”… Well that is precisely what the so-called deep learning versions of supervised learning do even better today than humans (i.e., more systematically). Machine learning transcended the whole idea of procedural programming. Nevertheless, it’s amusing how the “heuristics” he mentioned sound like weights in a neural network. Avoiding the collapse or the divergence of these weights became the challenge.
    Also, we can concur: AI shouldn’t be about writing poems but having a machine want to write a poem.

  • @dokonidanko
    @dokonidanko Před 8 měsíci

    i am over-impressed with this man, for so many years..

  • @yviruss1
    @yviruss1 Před rokem +2

    Awesome. Thanks for the upload---staring at my Feynman Lectures book.

  • @snozzmcberry2366
    @snozzmcberry2366 Před 3 lety +35

    Given the current existence of machine learning & deep learning in the field of AI, hearing him talk about pattern recognition around the 5 minute mark is fascinating. We can do that now. We can do that really, really, *really* well now. I bet he would've absolutely loved seeing convolutional neural networks and all of that.

    • @NuisanceMan
      @NuisanceMan Před rokem +5

      What the computer is really recognizing is still completely different from what we recognize. It's more like, they SIMULATE pattern recognition.

    • @ericamann2533
      @ericamann2533 Před 10 měsíci +2

      ​@Michael Lubin Yeah, but don't we as humans simulate pattern recognition ourselves as well? AI/neural networks are just able to run a much, MUCH larger number of simulations simultaneously from which to draw their concepts/conclusions much more quickly than the human brain in it's current state allows us the capacity to run?
      Isn't the human brain slowly built up through a person's lifetime in the same manner that a neural network is built via a machine learning model? I mean, like, isn't the whole of a human's experience basically logged and framed in our brains as what essentially is nothing more than some form of logic tree or SQL database or something to that effect?
      It's almost like the only difference between a human and an AI/neural network is in the hardware itself coupled alongside the underlying network architecture that is being built on said hardware over time?

    • @robegatt
      @robegatt Před 10 měsíci +2

      Not true. You are fooled by hype.

    • @UTKARSHARJUN
      @UTKARSHARJUN Před 10 měsíci +1

      @@ericamann2533 Can machines have emotions and morality ?

    • @4345ghee
      @4345ghee Před 9 měsíci

      @@UTKARSHARJUNdefine emotions and morality.

  • @newsoftheworld8558
    @newsoftheworld8558 Před 2 lety +15

    Feynman: "we could try to make a machine that runs like a cheetah".
    Boston Dynamics: Indeed, we can.

    • @mikebrown354
      @mikebrown354 Před 2 lety

      Hmmm...
      Boston Dynamics fastest robot It's not faster than a cheetah.. Only a faster than a human.

    • @newsoftheworld8558
      @newsoftheworld8558 Před 2 lety +4

      @@mikebrown354 First of all, it was a joke. Second of all, he said "run like a cheetah" not "run as fast as a cheetah". Peace!

    • @evgenyivanov744
      @evgenyivanov744 Před 2 lety

      Feynman: "we could try to make a machine that runs like a cheetah".
      Boston Dynamics: Hold my beer

    • @nathanroberson
      @nathanroberson Před 2 lety

      They’re not close to building in cheetah speed robot with legs that is Multi functioning. I don’t think they broke 20 miles an hour. There maybe at 12 miles an hour. You’re misunderstanding the difficulty.

    • @mjowsey
      @mjowsey Před 2 lety

      @@mikebrown354 how fast are your robot cheetahs?

  • @MrRathel
    @MrRathel Před 10 měsíci

    Mr Feynman talks about principles and that’s why this lecture is so up to date and interesting.

  • @oguntigli882
    @oguntigli882 Před rokem

    Very interesting in deed. Great to see Feynman talking about this important topic in the clip👏

  • @aryammanbhatia1002
    @aryammanbhatia1002 Před 3 lety +5

    13:43 blew my mind... it's the simple things that often skip past us

  • @3bmon3em
    @3bmon3em Před 3 lety +120

    The students were begging him to continue the lecture , can you duckin imagine ? 😂

    • @mamiferuD
      @mamiferuD Před 3 lety +21

      that's what you get when you don't have tik-tok

    • @emicadic
      @emicadic Před 3 lety +22

      That's what you get when you have real teachers....

    • @sjm2029
      @sjm2029 Před 2 lety

      They were not students

    • @Amethyst_Friend
      @Amethyst_Friend Před 2 lety

      Say "fucking". No need to censor yourself.

    • @nachiketkamble2600
      @nachiketkamble2600 Před 2 lety

      @@Amethyst_Friend CZcams will delete his comment.

  • @mikejones9156
    @mikejones9156 Před 11 měsíci +1

    I love how the 2nd question reifies the computer as if it were something seemingly autonomous and distinct from its designer/creator.

  • @tommyhuffman7499
    @tommyhuffman7499 Před rokem

    Wow, thanks for recording the questions!!

  • @patrikharrison5554
    @patrikharrison5554 Před rokem +6

    And 38 years later we live in a world where GPT-4 exists. Fabulous.
    Me: Can U summarise in a couple of sentences general thought of this video: [link to this video]
    GPT-3: The video "Richard Feynman: Can Machines Think?" by Lex Clips features an excerpt from an interview with physicist Richard Feynman, where he discusses the concept of machines thinking and the limitations of artificial intelligence. Feynman argues that while machines can perform tasks and simulate human intelligence, they lack the true understanding and consciousness that is essential to human thought. He suggests that there is a fundamental difference between the way humans think and the way machines process information.

  • @suntzu1409
    @suntzu1409 Před 3 lety +35

    A theoretical physicist talks about machines.
    And 20 years later or so, his every word becomes true

  • @chellichelli346
    @chellichelli346 Před 8 měsíci

    You are being very helpful and being very useful, when you upload clips like this.
    Hope you realize the role you are playing. The benefit you are creating.

  • @EngineeringAdjacent
    @EngineeringAdjacent Před 8 měsíci

    The Legend! Thanks.

  • @Beevreeter
    @Beevreeter Před 2 lety +20

    Can you imagine what he would think today if asked the same question? He hinted at facial recognition and fingerprint comparison, which back then was considered nearly impossible - today these are some of the simpler things that AI does, and much better than humans.

    • @RobFeldkamp
      @RobFeldkamp Před 7 měsíci +3

      Only because we provide near unlimited training data with captcha's and the like.

    • @nektarsolne4niy804
      @nektarsolne4niy804 Před 6 měsíci

      it wasn't considered "impossible". He said it himself - it just takes too long with the computational capacity and memory we have at a time. Human can do this faster. Therefore teaching a machine to do it would be impractical. And he later said the same thing about weather prediction (not much different from facial recognition conceptually) - right now machines are slow; but will probably get a lot faster and will be able to account for more parameters, as technology evolves. This is where we are now today. We have increased our capacity, and we have the algorithms. As a result we see a rise of AI in many fields.

  • @mukunthag8760
    @mukunthag8760 Před 3 lety +5

    I was smiling for the whole lecture : )

  • @Run3Po420
    @Run3Po420 Před 2 lety +1

    Stumbled across him explaining atoms and molecules last night the way he explained it brought me so much joy I giggled for like five minutes

  • @haydenwayne3710
    @haydenwayne3710 Před 11 měsíci

    Love Feyman! ...the manner in how he thinks...curves...straight lines.... + a sense of humor

  • @umeng2002
    @umeng2002 Před 3 lety +79

    I can attest, indeed the human brain is extremely good at recognizing a woman's hips jiggle when she walks.

  • @JongTulibasprofile
    @JongTulibasprofile Před 3 lety +4

    Brilliant man. Great explainer. Wow

  • @arsnakehert
    @arsnakehert Před rokem +2

    I love how Lex Fridman recording the questions feels like fulfilling a dream of interviewing Richard Feynman for his podcast

  • @gjosh2086
    @gjosh2086 Před rokem +1

    Richard Feynman was one of my heroes growing up, along with Einstein & Hawking. Such beautiful minds on a world so rife with struggle.

  • @falcodarkzz
    @falcodarkzz Před 3 lety +12

    I like how open ended Feynman leaves his answers here. He never gives an ultimatum about whether Ai will supersede humans, just interesting anecdotes.

  • @diabl2master
    @diabl2master Před 3 lety +3

    Interesting how the pattern recognition to recognise Jane, Jack, and other objects, words etc. is one of the main areas that computing has really advanced astonishingly well since then

  • @wpochert
    @wpochert Před rokem +1

    Love Richard...something about his delivery always reminded me of Ed Norton from Honeymooners ❤

  • @russellhill7694
    @russellhill7694 Před rokem

    Happy you promote Dr Feynman´s vision and curiosity

  • @IvelLeCog
    @IvelLeCog Před 4 lety +5

    This is a great watch Lex, cheers for uploading.

  • @stevetarrant3898
    @stevetarrant3898 Před rokem +20

    One of the greatest minds. On his physics admission exam to Princeton, he not only scored the highest score ever at the time, one of the professors commented that he should teach instead.

    • @Project_Kritical
      @Project_Kritical Před rokem +1

      @Chaotic Amphibian what! That’s amazing! Do you have any stories?

    • @ankitnmnaik229
      @ankitnmnaik229 Před 11 měsíci

      ​@Chaotic Amphibian for real .?

    • @sdott9751
      @sdott9751 Před 10 měsíci +1

      This is false. Feynman was dumb until he met his wife.

    • @KINGFAROOQ1216
      @KINGFAROOQ1216 Před 10 měsíci +1

      Lol maybe he matured late, wasn't he married at like 19 or 20

  • @_tnk_
    @_tnk_ Před rokem

    Wow this feels really ahead of it’s time. The very last part he essentially described the problem of over-fitting or shortcut-learning

  • @anmoldubey3628
    @anmoldubey3628 Před 2 lety

    the clarity of examples

  • @2011littleguy
    @2011littleguy Před 3 lety +14

    1. I'm a fan of Feynman and have read most of his books.
    2. I think he would be amazed to see how far computer learning has come. The idea of a computer changing its own code was becoming feasible when he gave this lecture.
    3. I really wish someone had asked him his thoughts about HAL9000 from the movie 2001 A Space Odyssey.

    • @davemclaren4836
      @davemclaren4836 Před 3 lety +6

      I think he'd be tickled that people are watching this lecture on their phones.

    • @phattjohnson
      @phattjohnson Před rokem +1

      Computer learning is still just mashing database query results together into various outputs that still may or may NOT be the results we're after.. a computer still has absolutely no way of telling what data is important in the real world.

  • @nikolatasev4948
    @nikolatasev4948 Před 2 lety +5

    A great video. It shows that when trying to get an intelligent answer/behavior from a machine, it is always critical to see how you present a real world and its problems to it. And, of course, given more resources machines will start exploiting all the loopholes you leave them.

    • @phattjohnson
      @phattjohnson Před rokem

      The machine will never know the real world - the weakest link will always be the human operators who will always be feeding it biased, incomplete data... AI is a myth. Computer programs are getting better at what we would like them to do, but "AI" is just a buzzword.

  • @DanKostkaWriter
    @DanKostkaWriter Před 11 měsíci

    This video makes me realize that I've heard him speak before but never in lecture mode like this. I can see why his lectures were so popular.

  • @Boxofdonuts
    @Boxofdonuts Před 9 měsíci

    Way ahead of his time and really right on so many things that haven't popped up until now.

  • @oisiaa
    @oisiaa Před 2 lety +20

    Feynman is brilliant and puts wonder into the minds of his audience. I wish we had more like him. No, Neil DeGrasse Tyson doesn't even come close.

    • @hazardeur
      @hazardeur Před 2 lety +5

      while i agree, it's better to have neil then nothing at all

    • @Wabajak13
      @Wabajak13 Před rokem +5

      Neil always felt like a showman. Like he's a salesman for science. Feynman is pure passion and excitement.

    • @davidblack2970
      @davidblack2970 Před rokem +4

      Tyson is nowhere near as funny as he thinks he is. He has a seemingly inexhaustible supply of common misconceptions which he laboriously deflates well all the while marvelling at his own wit. He doesn't really encourage free thinking by the audience, who usually know where he is going a couple sentences (and a number of his chuckles) before he gets there. I like the man, but he is hard to listen to after a while.

    • @dr9205
      @dr9205 Před 10 měsíci +1

      Tyson should stick with chicken 🐓🍗

    • @DannyBowen25
      @DannyBowen25 Před 8 měsíci

      ​@@hazardeurIt's better to have truth than nothing at all. He's selling a religion, not a reality.

  • @Diomedene
    @Diomedene Před 3 lety +18

    For me Feynman telling a gamer story from the old days made the video.

  • @dorianphilotheates3769
    @dorianphilotheates3769 Před 7 měsíci +2

    I like the way he says “🐆”.

  • @yogalife365
    @yogalife365 Před rokem

    Thank you for this upload.