Roger A. Shrubber
Well-Known Member
all it takes is one.How many apocalypses have been predicted and how many have we had?
all it takes is one.How many apocalypses have been predicted and how many have we had?
there has been more than one work of fiction whose premise is that the world ended — and nobody noticed.all it takes is one.
Imo,brains use combinatorial logic.They also do not have devine right to creativity. Chess computers use precedental analysis and do very well.Facts aren't the same as thinking, nor does combinatorial logic allow novel solutions. The human brain is nothing like a computer. The San Diego Zoo had an elephant with more creativity than any computer has.
I've always said if we were taken over by ET or AI ,we would mercifully never notice (noticed?)there has been more than one work of fiction whose premise is that the world ended — and nobody noticed.
I don’t know how you can assert that.I've always said if we were taken over by ET or AI ,we would mercifully never notice (noticed?)
TY, HGCC. He posted it Dec or Jan. It was some kind of art. I think he'd said it was chatgpt. He explained itI think it was sativied, coulda been xtsho, not me though. I believe they were using DALL-E for pics.
It's not a matter of opinion, it's fact. There is more than one brain in our head and they work together to come up with thoughts that a computer can't. Interestingly, you are using a metaphor to describe how the brain works by drawing upon the way a computer works. It's not true but this points to something computers don't do. They don't use metaphors.Imo,brains use combinatorial logic.They also do not have devine right to creativity. Chess computers use precedental analysis and do very well.
All i could google for that term was in the study of transactional analysis, psychology.precedental analysis
But if anybody asks, I dunno wtf i'm talkin' about.PPO and then KL Diversion (Proximal Policy Optimization, Kullback–Leibler divergence).
It's not that our brains are computers, that i'm arguing. And it's not that computersIt's not a matter of opinion, it's fact. There is more than one brain in our head and they work together to come up with thoughts that a computer can't.Your brain does not process information, retrieve knowledge or store memories. In short: your brain is not a computer
I don't doubt that some day there will be super capable artificial intelligence. I simply doubt that we can build a machine that surpasses what the human brain can do. We can't even say how the human brain holds a memory, much less build something to emulate what a human brain does..It's not that our brains are computers, that i'm arguing. And it's not that computers
are like our brains either. It's that given enough speed, Tbytes/sec, Tera flops, big data
and big data management that the computers, (collaboratively linked, just like you said
human brains do) on the WWW can emulate what
i think would amount to some world sized, or super brain, in emulation only. Emulation
so precise that these AI models could have "feelings" be "sensitive" even have compassion,
or hatred. They certainly have all the data, and finally all of the processing speed, and they're
linked on the WWW. Smart phones, connectivity, it's all working together to implement,
facilitate AI in this example we have of ChatGPT. Just because a thing knows what is said
to be compassionate, does not mean that thing feels compassion.
I think you are too focused on making a computer into a brain, orWhy the Human Brain Project Went Wrong—and How to Fix It
We don't do what computers do and computers don't do what we do. Computers are great tools, though. So, to say the human brain is slower at doing what a computer is good at makes no sense. Computers cannot and will never invent new things like people do. I think people are anthropomorphizing computers because that's the way we think. The human brain is a lot more interesting and complex than you portray in your post.I think you are too focused on making a computer into a brain, or
defining our brains as being computers. I think it's computing tech
advancement, miniaturization, nano tech, computing speed, connectivity,
big data and big data management, among others that will allow for
computers to emulate human brains. They'll not become human brains, nor even
work in the same way, but will bring about the same result, magnitudes
of times faster than what we can do with our finite brain. You talk of
trillions of human brain synapses, etc., the brain is actually slower and
possessing lower numbers than AI now has at it's disposal. And if it's not
ready now, just give it another Moore's law cycle and see if it won't be next year...
_edit_
It was like the John Henry, Steel driving Man, allegory. John was some kind
of steel driving man, and everybody wanted him to rule the day, but he
couldn't survive battle against the machine. Same damn thing with AI. Our
combined human brain power can't touch AI, even now, let alone tomorrow.
isn’t that a bit like saying you have to… we really don't understand the universe around us, so how can we build a computer that does?
I don't think what I'm saying is like that. Though I will point out that your use of analogy and my ability to readily understand it is what computers, megaflops and all aren't good at. A top flight chef has to understand how the ingredients and techniques produce the flavors of the food he's serving and the effects those flavors will have on his diners before he can be a top flight chef. I'm saying that a human can't design a machine that has capabilities beyond his understanding and the human mind is not understood at this time. Computers are nothing like the human mind.isn’t that a bit like saying you have to
be a top-flight chef to be a restaurant critic? I think the second clause is not conditioned by the first.
This is oddly specific and I feel the need to ask, respectfully - was this revealed with the use of dimethyltryptamine?The universe is a lot more interesting too. We just see 3D and the universe is 4D. There are at least 6 alternate universes adjacent to ours. Our brain is not isolated from the universe or universes. Our knowledge about them is growing too. Our brains are not isolated from these phenomena, our brains are organs in our bodies that is fully integrated into 4D space that we can hardly comprehend at this time.
No, I've never done anything other than weed and psilocybin mushrooms and those only twice.This is oddly specific and I feel the need to ask, respectfully - was this revealed with the use of dimethyltryptamine?
Big brain stuff, trying to understand Quantum and String theory is certainly above my level after devoting some time to it previously. The reason I asked about dimethyltryptamine is clinical studies are being done with it, and trying to keep an open mind about the infinite number of parallel universes, is it possible that substances such as dimethyltryptamine allow the brain to access/receive information that is not typically possible? Similar to the car accident victim being able to "see", obviously she got that information from somewhere. Was her brain able to receive information via a different frequency, not necessarily a parallel universe, but experiencing this universe differently than we understand?No, I've never done anything other than weed and psilocybin mushrooms and those only twice.
Some of that paragraph came from my amazement some time ago, when I realized that I could not perceive 4-space yet my brain and body are in it. Some of it came from this essay that this discussion brought me to:
Your Brain Is Not a Computer. It Is a Transducer
A new theory of how the brain works — neural transduction theory — might upend everything we know about consciousness and the universe itself.www.discovermagazine.com