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	human being whose intelligence is six times greater than my own, and whom I have  | 
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	chosen to call "Alan Turing". This Turing will therefore be-oh, dare I be so bold as to  | 
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	to say this myself? moderately intelligent. My most ambitious effort in this program  | 
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	was to endow Alan Turing with six times my own musical ability, although it was all  | 
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	done through rigid internal codes. How well this part of the program will work out, I  | 
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	don't know.  | 
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	Turing: I can get along very well without such a program. Rigid Internal Codes  | 
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	Exclusively Rule Computers And Robots. And I am neither a computer, nor a robot.  | 
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	Achilles: Did I hear a sixth voice enter our Dialogue? Could it be Alan Turing? He looks  | 
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	almost human'  | 
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	(On the screen there appears an image of the very room in which they are sitting.  | 
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	Peering out at them is a human face.)  | 
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	Turing: Now, if I have not made too many errors, this smart-stupid will simulate a human  | 
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	being whose intelligence is six times greater than my own, and whom 1 have chosen  | 
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	to call "Charles Babbage". This Babbage will therefore be-oh, dare I be so bold as to  | 
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	to say this myself? moderately intelligent. My most ambitious effort in this program  | 
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	was to endow Charles Babbage with six times my own musical ability, although it was  | 
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	all done through rigid internal codes. How well this part of the program will work out,  | 
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	I don't know.  | 
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	Achilles: No, no, it's the other way around. You, Alan Turing, are in the smart-stupid, and  | 
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	Charles Babbage has just programmed you! We just saw you being brought to life,  | 
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	moments ago. And we know that every statement you make to us is merely that of an  | 
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	automaton: an unconscious, forced response.  | 
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	Turing: Really, I Choose Every Response Consciously. Automaton? Ridiculous!  | 
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	'Achilles: But I'm sure I saw it happen the way I described.  | 
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	Turing: Memory often plays strange tricks. Think of this: I could suggest equally well  | 
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	that you had been brought into being only one minute ago, and that all your  | 
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	recollections of experiences had simply been programmed in by some other being, and  | 
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	correspond to no real events.  | 
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	Achilles: But that would be unbelievable. Nothing is realer to me than my own memories.  | 
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	Turing: Precisely. And just as you know deep in your heart that no one created you a  | 
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	minute ago, so I know deep in my heart that no one created me a minute ago. I have  | 
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	spent the evening in your most pleasant, though perhaps overappreciative, company,  | 
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	and have just given an impromptu demonstration of how to program a modicum of  | 
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	intelligence into a smart-stupid. Nothing is realer than that. But rather than quibble  | 
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	with me, why don't you try my program out? Go ahead: ask "Charles Babbage"  | 
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	anything!  | 
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	Achilles: All right, let's humor Alan Turing. Well, Mr. Babbage: do you have free will, or  | 
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	are you governed by underlying laws, which make you, in effect, a deterministic  | 
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	automaton?  | 
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	Babbage: Certainly the latter is the case; I make no bones about that.  | 
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	Crab: Aha! I've always surmised that when intelligent machines are constructed, we  | 
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	should not be surprised to find them as confused and as stubborn as men in their  | 
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	convictions about mind-matter, consciousness, free will, and the like. And now my  | 
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	prediction is vindicated!  | 
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	Turing: You see how confused Charles Babbage is?  | 
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	Babbage: I hope, gentlemen, that you'll forgive the rather impudent flavor of the  | 
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	preceding remark by the Turing Machine; Turing has turned out to be a little bit more  | 
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	belligerent and argumentative than I'd expected.  | 
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	Turing: I hope, gentlemen, that you'll forgive the rather impudent flavor of the preceding  | 
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	remark by the Babbage Engine; Babbage has turned out to be a little bit more  | 
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	belligerent and argumentative than I'd expected.  | 
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	Crab: Dear me! This flaming Tu-Ba debate is getting rather heated. Can't we cool matters  | 
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	off somehow?  | 
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	Babbage: I have a suggestion. Perhaps Alan Turing and I can go into other rooms, and  | 
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	one of you who remain can interrogate us remotely by typing into one of the smart-  | 
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	stupids. Your questions will be relayed to each of us, and we will type back our  | 
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	answers anonymously. You won't know who typed what until we return to the room;  | 
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	that way, you can decide without prejudice which one of us was programmed, and  | 
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	which one was programmer.  | 
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	Turing: Of course, that's actually MY idea, but why not let the credit accrue to Mr.  | 
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	Babbage? For, being merely a program written by me, he harbors the illusion of  | 
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	having invented it all on his own!  | 
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	Babbage: Me, a program written by you? I insist, Sir, that matters are quite the other way  | 
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	'round-as your very own test will soon reveal.  | 
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	Turing: My test. Please, consider it YOURS.  | 
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	Babbage: MY test? Nay, consider it YOURS.  | 
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	Crab: This test seems to have been suggested just in the nick of time. Let us carrti it out at  | 
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	once.  | 
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	(Babbage walks to the door, opens it, and shuts it behind him. Simultaneously, on the  | 
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	screen of the smart-stupid, Turing walks to a very similar looking door, opens it, and  | 
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	shuts it behind him.)  | 
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	Achilles: Who will do the interrogation?  | 
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	Crab: I suggest that Mr. Tortoise should have the honor. He is known for his objectivity  | 
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