158 8 Cognitive Synergy e The Wozniak "coffee test": go into an average American house and figure out how to make coffee, including identifying the coffee machine, figuring out what the buttons do, finding the coffee in the cabinet, etc. e Story understanding — reading a story, or watching it on video, and then answering questions about what happened (including questions at various levels of abstraction) e Graduating (virtual-world or robotic) preschool e Passing the elementary school reading curriculum (which involves reading and answering questions about some picture books as well as purely textual ones) e Learning to play an arbitrary video game based on experience only, or based on experience plus reading instructions One interesting point about tests like this is that each of them seems to some AGI researchers to encapsulate the crux of the AGI problem, and be unsolvable by any system not far along the path to human-level AGI — yet seems to other AGI researchers, with different conceptual perspectives, to be something probably game-able by narrow-AI methods. And of course, given the current state of science, there’s no way to tell which of these practical tests really can be solved via a narrow-AI approach, except by having a lot of people try really hard over a long period of time. A question raised by these observations is whether there is some fundamental reason why it’s hard to make an objective, theory-independent measure of intermediate progress toward advanced AGI. Is it just that we haven’t been smart enough to figure out the right test — or is there some conceptual reason why the very notion of such a test is problematic? We don’t claim to know for sure — but in the rest of this section we’ll outline one possible reason why the latter might be the case. 8.7.2 A Possible Answer: Cognitive Synergy is Tricky! Why might a solid, objective empirical test for intermediate progress toward AGI be an in- feasible notion? One possible reason, we suggest, is