|   | 
  
    | 
     
     | 
    
      
      
		  
     | 
   
  
    
      
        
            | 
          
            
              
                 
                  
                  Posted 2006-01-31, 11:26 PM
                  
in reply to Medieval Bob's post starting "The point isn't to ask dumb questions. ..."
                 | 
                  | 
               
              
                  | 
                  | 
               
              
                
		              
                  
                  
                    
                    
	
Medieval Bob said: 
	 
	
	
		| 
				The point isn't to ask dumb questions.  It's to allow complete freedom.  If you can think of a clever, creative way to defeat a particularly strong enemy, then you're allowed to do so.  Usually, you're even rewarded specially for doing it.  Now, for a player to be able to do that on a pre-programmed game, the programmers would have to have thought of every possible creative solution in existence (not even remotely possible).
		 | 
	 
	 
 
- first off i was being sarcastic when i said the part about the dumb questions. 
- second the whole point of AI is that the comp can think for itself. it will be like talking to/with another person. 
- third if a computer can think for itself then there is no need for the programmer to program in every creative solution in the possible world. 
- fourth you can't prove that something can't be ever done(unless you're extremely specific). they thought that a person couldn't jump several feet off the ground, but on the moon, it can be done. but they didn't know that back then, did they? 
- fifth and lastly, if you live in a world where not everything is possible, then it never will be and you will be living in the past no matter what you say.
                    
                  
                  
              		
                  
                  
              		
		              
		              
			              
				                
				              
					              
						              Last edited by sciencekid; 2006-01-31 at 11:38 PM.
					              
					              
				              
			              
		              
		              
                 | 
                  | 
               
              
                  | 
                  | 
               
             
           | 
         
       
     | 
    
 
     | 
   
  
    | 
      
     | 
    
      
     | 
   
 
  
 
 | 
  |