The machine takes in chinese stories and questions about them as input, it simulates the formal structure of actual chinese brains in processing these stories, and it gives out chinese answers as outputs. Ever wondered what the chinese room argument is all about The chinese room is a thought experiment designed by john searle in his 1980 article minds, brains, and programs, largely as a response to alan turing's turing test and functionalist approaches to the mind.
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The argument was proposed by philosopher john searle in 1980 and is named after a room in which a person who doesn't understand chinese is able to answer questions in chinese by following a set of instructions.
The chinese room is a thought experiment devised by john searle, an american philosopher, in 1980 to challenge the notion of strong artificial intelligence (ai)
In the thought experiment, searle imagines a person who does not understand chinese isolated in a room with a book containing detailed instructions for manipulating chinese symbols. Searle's chinese room contains a person who understands no chinese but has detailed and comprehensive instructions for the mechanical processing (without translation) of chinese symbols to generate meaningful responses to written messages.