A two minute old gazelle is born with a lot of pretrained instincts. Instincts built from a genetic optimization algorithm that's been going on for millions of years. Spacial reasoning and "run from predators" is not something it needs to be taught. The data processing is already baked in.
The point is that being "baked in" is something machines lack which biological intelligences possess. Animal brains don't learn those "baked in" abilities. We may need to "bake in" similar abilities into the AIs, since we recreating evolution is computationally prohibitive.
> The point is that being "baked in" is something machines lack which biological intelligences possess.
I’d say it’s the exact opposite: A freshly born CPU is as a capable as it will ever be. The problem is that it never learns anything new, as opposed to biological organisms which continuously adapt to their environment.
>since we recreating evolution is computationally prohibitive.
You don't see what you did there. The only way to 'bake in' these things is to create them via evolution in the first place. Also, these instincts are not 'baked' they continue to evolve with each generation.