Turing Test and the Practice of Law: The Role of Autonomous Levels of AI Legal Reasoning

Eliot, Lance

arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence 

A major question that has generally been unaddressed involves how we will know when AILR has achieved Artificial Intelligence (AI) is increasingly being autonomous capacities. So far, AI as applied to the applied to law and a myriad of legal tasks amid legal profession has primarily consisted of aiding or attempts to bolster AI Legal Reasoning (AILR) supporting the legal work of human lawyers but has autonomous capabilities. A major question that has not reached the capability of being able to generally been unaddressed involves how we will autonomously perform legal tasks. A base assumption know when AILR has achieved autonomous is that inexorably there will be advances made in AI capacities. The field of AI has grappled with similar that will boost AILR systems and ultimately transcend quandaries over how to assess the attainment of them into having autonomous capacities, but there Artificial General Intelligence (AGI), a persistently does not yet exist any bona fide and nor rigorous discussed issue among scholars since the inception of means to viably attest to whether such AILR AI, with the Turing Test communally being considered autonomy has been achieved [44].

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