Agreed! And that ‘margin of error’ plays out in the human condition as suffering. — Possibility
Panta rhei. — Heraclitus
the all-purpose problem solving abilities of humans that can come up with good solutions to almost any problem they encounter. — Gnomon
It depends what exactly you mean but yes in a general sense I think most things are not clear cut and discrete but rather a more flexible spectrum of transition in which a certain level of bias or interpretation must be made.
For example using the previous example we could say a shoe is a piece of footwear you wear to walk or make a fashion statement. However when one considers repurposing and lateral thinking a shoe can indeed function in many ways - it can be a container for plants, a missile to throw at someone when you’re annoyed, something symbolic like the shoes that hang on telephone wires where drugs are sold, it could be part of a sculpture or art installation in a gallery, or could be worn comically by different animals - cats dogs etc. The list is endless. Yet we can’t afford to spend time defining every possible way a shoe can exist or function even though the possibilities are vast. This applies to most objects and thus yes the world is “fuzzy” indeed — Benj96
As you rightly pointed out, no definition is perfect except maybe mathematical and scientific ones
— Agent Smith — Hillary
Maybe so, but those fulfilling sufferings need to be taken by a person´s own free will, not after someone is forcing her/him to the "game" of life.
— Antinatalist
You're on target, sir/ma'am! However, who's coercing anyone to save the world? Do you think Alexander Fleming was bullied into discovering antibiotics? Are all the folks engaged in cancer research under some kind of duress? :chin:
— Agent Smith
Maybe we are speaking about different things. By ´forcing´ in this particular point I mean reproduction. I thought it was quite clear. — Antinatalist
Metaphorically, death, discomfort, and boredom are the gun to the head. That is part of my OP about dissatisfaction. That is part of complying with the game. — schopenhauer1
'Objective' means pertaining to the object"
— Nickolasgaspar
'Objective' means pertaining to the object
— Tobias
Gracias! I didn't know that!
— Agent Smith
:lol: — Hillary
Metaphysical means that a claim lies beyond our current knowledge.
So the truth value of it is unknown. So no its not wrong.
In my comment I explain that , in order to avoid all metaphysical assumptions we will have to accept Objectivity as an observer dependent term based on the regular nature of reality that our methods and senses detect , register and verify.
Do you agree with that statement? — Nickolasgaspar
But the computer does! It computes big X times as fast as we do. On big Y times as many data we do. Simulating intelligence. The brain is a universe in small. Everything there is in the world, we can resonate with. While walking the streets you constantly resonate with the world and your inside world, and yourself (body) on their turn, shape the world. From conception to last breath, no from big bang to last breath, one ongoing process. No on or off button. Well, a final off button maybe... — Hillary
Actually, the first so-called "computers" were women mathematicians. And their primary advantage over their male competitors was that they were able to sit still and focus on numbers for hours on end. Meanwhile, the men would get restless, their minds would wander, and they were made to look like fools by the very females. who were not supposed to be "good with numbers". Unfortunately, for those number-crunching gals, the digital computer is even more focused & relentless. But dumb! If they divided by zero, they would keep-on crunching until kingdom come, or the machine burst into flames, whichever came first. — Gnomon
"Sit, and focus!"
"I tell you something, stick tha numbers on your p$n$s! Oh no, to big a number!" — Hillary
Memories of the future he traveled to, like us, and then returning to the past? Just travel to the past? That's difficult, AS. But out of curiosity, did he say anything about WW3? I know he rightly predicted the Iranian revolution too. — Hillary
Yes. That's how AI chess players beat humans : they have instant access to thousands of historical games and situational plays. The only thing that keeps humans in the game today is creativity : to do what hasn't been done before, hence is not yet in memory. — Gnomon
The brain doesn't compute. It simulates. The mind computes. — Hillary
'Objective' means pertaining to the object" — Nickolasgaspar
'Objective' means pertaining to the object — Tobias
Maybe so, but those fulfilling sufferings need to be taken by a person´s own free will, not after someone is forcing her/him to the "game" of life. — Antinatalist
The ship was designed by just putting a model upside down. — Hillary
Ouioui! — Hillary
During the suffering though, this feels differently... What if the suffering continues? — Hillary
'Tis better to have loved and lost than never to have loved at all. — Alfred Lord Tennyson
'Tis better to have lived and suffered than never to have lived at all. — Agent Smith
Most interesting! :chin: — Ms. Marple
Don’t complain, just kill yourself — schopenhauer1
Count me among those who think it’s a mistake to treat the mind as a computational device and neurons as 1’s and 0’s. I hew with enactivist cognitive psychology which rejects computationalism and representationalism when it comes to modelling human perception.
Relating this back to your distinction between memory and pattern recognition, I would argue that the neural activity of the brain is constantly changing in response both to external stimuli and its own activity. This means that memory is not stored patterns that remain unchanged until accessed. Meanwhile, what is perceived comes already pre-interpreted based on prior expectations. So memory , in the form
of expectations , co-determines what counts as data in the first place. All perception is recognition because of this contribution of anticipatory neural activity to perception at even the lowest levels. — Joshs
Memory is just data storage. Pattern recognition is the beginning of cognition : knowing, consciousness. Pattern recognition sees the invisible (meaningful) links between isolated bits of information. Human intelligence is far ahead of AI in its ability to do more than just mimic. Plus the human mind uses a variety of cognitive processes -- beyond pure Logic (e.g. emotional & visceral & muscle memory) -- to add nuance to sensation. :brow:
Ie ie! Yokoso!
You're welcome. — Gnomon
Sure, but a trend is very different from a widely-held opinion, wouldn’t you say? — Possibility
Pareto’s principle is about the distribution of quantitative value, which is only part of the picture. I find it interesting that so many people experience quite an affected relation to the graph. The basic feeling is that it should at least be more of a normal distribution - a bell curve - and that it should be someone else making the change. — Possibility
How do art aficionados/experts identify the provenance of a painting?
— Agent Smith
First, document search. Sales records.
Second, paint used. Many forgers get caught using paint that was not available at the time. — Jackson
I recommend reading about Artificial Neural Networks:
Neural networks learn (or are trained) by processing examples, each of which contains a known "input" and "result," forming probability-weighted associations between the two, which are stored within the data structure of the net itself. The training of a neural network from a given example is usually conducted by determining the difference between the processed output of the network (often a prediction) and a target output. This difference is the error. The network then adjusts its weighted associations according to a learning rule and using this error value. Successive adjustments will cause the neural network to produce output which is increasingly similar to the target output. After a sufficient number of these adjustments the training can be terminated based upon certain criteria. This is known as supervised learning.
Such systems "learn" to perform tasks by considering examples, generally without being programmed with task-specific rules. For example, in image recognition, they might learn to identify images that contain cats by analyzing example images that have been manually labeled as "cat" or "no cat" and using the results to identify cats in other images. They do this without any prior knowledge of cats, for example, that they have fur, tails, whiskers, and cat-like faces. Instead, they automatically generate identifying characteristics from the examples that they process. — Relativist
Interesting subject, AS! Let me give one shot for the goal. The human memory function very differently from the computer memory. If an image is projected on our retina, a corresponding neural structure is activated. The world is full of patterns and forms of which the parts have no causal connection to the whole. Diametrically opposed parts of the circle don't influence one another directly, but still the circle ( or spherical form of the sun) stays a circle. All parts have a common cause and form the circle. — Hillary
If at some future point, it becomes possible to artificially gestate a zygote, then abortions will be obsolete if the pro-lifers are willing to pay for the gestation service (can't be cheap), and to divide up the resulting children among themselves to be raised.
I'm alluding to a general problem I have with many pro-lifers: it's easy express moral outrage at abortion, while shrugging off the fact that the alternative has life-altering consequences for the mother who gives birth ("that's their problem, but I'll pray for them"). — Relativist
Pro-lifers are also pro-voter suppression (and pro-death penalty). Why? It's all about demographic control. Reproductive freedom is more deliberately exercised in the US more by White working / middle class women than non-white women and contributes to accelerating America's looming so-called "demographic crisis" The "evangelical" pro-life movement, IMHO, always has been about "the good lord's" work of Making Apartheid Great Again. :shade:
Four pro-life SC Justices, appointed by 2 GOP Presidents who both lost the popular vote in their respective elections (one starting two unpaid-for, fraudelent, failed wars of opportunity and the other Impeached twice while in the pocket of Russia & Saudi Arabia), form the basis for a judicial cabal (on the verge of) stripping citizens of established Constitutional Rights (i.e. protections) for the first time in US history, aided and abetted by a fifth pro-insurrectionist joke-of-a-Justice. — 180 Proof
I don't think so, pregnancy will then be obsolete. The only babies being produced will then be designer (GM) babies. Human abortion will be enforced by the newly derived species, resulting in the extinction of the human species — Metaphysician Undercover
The justices solidly reaffirmed that core right in 1992, reinforcing the principle that states could not interfere with a woman's ability to obtain an abortion before a fetus could survive out the womb, at about 23 weeks. Even justices who had criticized Roe said it was important to adhere to the precedent, for institutional reasons and because, quite simply, Americans had come to rely on it. — CNN
Our findings show that more babies now survive being born too soon than ever before, which is testament to the highly-skilled and dedicated staff in our neonatal services. — Professor Neil Marlow, an MRC-funded academic at University College Londons Institute for Womens Health and a co-author of both papers
Most interesting. — Ms. Marple
That means that those possible future children will be treated as a means, not as an end itself. That is wrong. — Antinatalist
Back in the sixties, we had to make one of those for a physics project.
— unenlightened
Yeah, I think I read about that school that exploded... — Hillary
An electric motor and a spring, basically. The difficulty is in getting the forces balanced so that the motor operates the finger with the strength to flick the switch while also tensioning the spring enough to pull it back afterwards. If i remember I had a very small toy motor geared down with a worm thread, and a coil spring from god knows where. But you could use a spiral spring too. The finger is just mounted on an axle that makes a 1/4 turn each time, and the lid works by gravity. Wooden box -easy to fit the bits to; an old cigar box in my case with the top cut in half and hinged. — unenlightened
Back in the sixties, we had to make one of those for a physics project. The joy of liberal education! — unenlightened
What would be the reason for a meme to autodestruct? — Hillary
I've committed memetic suicide a 1000 times at least. — Hillary
American bullshit — Streetlight
I know that I know nothing"
- Socrates
:death: :flower: — javi2541997
he himself is the older man — javi2541997
