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i-am-curious | 5 years ago

What's the incentive to master a game already beaten by AI?

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SamBam|5 years ago

What is the incentive to run faster, when a car can drive faster, or build strength when a tractor can lift more?

What is the incentive to do any artistic endeavor, if you are not planning on being one of the world's best pianists, or painters, or singers, or furniture-makers?

Go was probably already solved by some distant species on a planet far away. Did that make it any less enjoyable for us to play? What's the difference?

braythwayt|5 years ago

What is my motivation to practice my bass?

If I do it to make a living, that’s one thing. If I do it to be “the best,” that’s another thing. If I do it for the pleasure of learning to do a thing, that’s a third thing.

It’s the same with games, but the emphasis on winning skews the culture towards wanting to be “the best.” But for those following the third path, AI beating humans changes nothing for them, just as synth bass and sequencing changes nothing for me.

galimaufry|5 years ago

People do foot races even though gazelle is invented.

paxys|5 years ago

Go ask Magnus Carlsen I guess

devin|5 years ago

Other replies covered the main points, but I don't really see why AI has anything to do with the pursuit of mastery.

If suddenly computers can create perfect, beautiful music, I will still play an instrument.

I didn't downvote you because I guess it's a fair question to ask, but it is a rather naive one. Why learn arithmetic if a computer can do it?