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12-09-2001, 07:59 PM | #51 | |
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12-09-2001, 08:44 PM | #52 | ||
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So I see that you agree that people just continuously seek transient goals. Some goals may take years to attain but on the other hand, long-term goals are sometimes abandoned, so they aren't always set in stone. |
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12-10-2001, 07:49 AM | #53 | |
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12-10-2001, 07:59 AM | #54 |
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We have moved beyond the naive notion that mathematical equations can capture the acts of the universe. It is being replaced with complexity theory or programmed code of cellular automata! Who wants to write the four lines of code that generate our universe? Lord Malin |
12-10-2001, 09:36 AM | #55 | |
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12-10-2001, 01:13 PM | #56 | |
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The human brain is very different from a computer. If you just imagine placing a macroscopic well programmed silicon chip into a bucket of sand and junk, then returning back about a year later and finding that it has re configurated all that sand into a supercomputer.
That is similar to what the human brain has achieved. Just a simple differentiated stem cell in a embryo configurated itself over an evolutionary background of millions of years into the human brain. croc Quote:
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12-10-2001, 01:33 PM | #57 | |
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12-10-2001, 02:14 PM | #58 |
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I feel there is a better way to illustrate my point.
Imagine building a well programmed nano-robot about the size of a human egg. Then placing it in an environment full of all the raw materials to build copies of itself, link them up into one great intricate and intelligent machine. It may seem like science fiction but nature is already making that science fiction scenario a reality in the form of the Human Brain. crocodile deathroll |
12-10-2001, 04:21 PM | #59 |
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I didn't mean to suggest that our brains and computers were equivalent. My point was in reference to madmax's earlier comment that insinuated that computers cannot make choices. When a computer decides between two alternatives, it is every bit a choice as when we choose what to have for dinner. I don't personally consider this a very complicated issue...
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12-10-2001, 04:44 PM | #60 | |
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Humans do this too, although they are much more versatile than chess computers are. And we can make several decisions per second. Our brains tick at about 20-40 cycles/second(?) but it can take many cycles for us to come up with solutions to complex problems. |
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