So, can we solve problems this way, following nature's lead? — Agent Smith
make the correct mistake. — Agent Smith
Aka intelligence. :clap: :100: — 180 Proof
The essence of nature's approach: solve problems by making mistakes. — Agent Smith
Mathematics in a nutshell. The cleaning lady of a famous mathematician was asked what the guy did. She replied, "He scribbles on paper, scowls at it, and wads it up and throws it away." — jgill
:lol: Trial and Error?! — Agent Smith
Trial and Error?!
— Agent Smith
Utter reality, believe me! You make a sequence of mistakes, altering things as you go along, hoping the sequence converges to the result you're after — jgill
Two wrongs make a right? — Agent Smith
Wrong, you are not right. :brow: You keep moving in a direction, making changes as you go along, hoping for a flash of inspiration or a breakthrough. It's rare that you can see a complicated proof in its entirety at the beginning. :cool: — jgill
If it doesn't work, go back to the node from which it originated, try the other branch and if that doesn't work, assuming there are only two branches on that node, go to the next higher node, so and so forth. — Agent Smith
Remember though that each branch is a mistake (a mutation in an otherwise stable genotype). — Agent Smith
i.e. Natural selection :up:Indeed, decidely computer-like, using a brute-force search algorithm. — Agent Smith
Indeed, decidely computer-like, using a brute-force search algorithm. — Agent Smith
If you simulate a cannonball, the computer has to perform actual calculations for the trajectory. Is our universe (also) a computer? — Agent Smith
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