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Dad jokes, D.A.D. jokes, and the GHoST test for artificial consciousness

Resource type
Journal Article
Authors/contributors
Title
Dad jokes, D.A.D. jokes, and the GHoST test for artificial consciousness
Abstract
The ability of a computer to have a sense of humor, that is, to generate authentically funny jokes, has been taken by some theorists to be a sufficient condition for artificial consciousness. Creativity, the argument goes, is indicative of consciousness and the ability to be funny indicates creativity. While this line fails to offer a legitimate test for artificial consciousness, it does point in a possibly correct direction. There is a relation between consciousness and humor, but it relies on a different sense of “sense of humor,” that is, it requires the getting of jokes, not the generating of jokes. The question, then, becomes how to tell when an artificial system enjoys a joke. We propose a mechanism, the GHoST test, which may be useful for such a task and can begin to establish whether a system possesses artificial consciousness.
Publication
Science & Philosophy
Volume
9
Issue
1
Date
červenec 25, 2021
Language
eng
ISSN
22827765, 22827757
Accessed
3/7/25, 7:20 AM
Library Catalog
DOI.org (CSL JSON)
Citation
Gimbel, S., Presser, C., & Mogianesi, P. (2021). Dad jokes, D.A.D. jokes, and the GHoST test for artificial consciousness. Science & Philosophy, 9(1). https://doi.org/10.23756/sp.v9i1.612