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GENERAL DISCUSSIONS
Future Tech ... on nanobots and the human soul in the 26th Century
Saturday, December 31, 2005 8:18 PM
KARNEJJ
Saturday, December 31, 2005 8:21 PM
Quote: Karnejj: You make a convincing argument but the truth is in the details. Not once has 'John Doe' had his brain removed. His essence lies within, and that is never touched.
Quote: I don’t agree. There’s more to life than a simulation. At least a simulation that we can envision.
Saturday, December 31, 2005 8:50 PM
GUNRUNNER
Quote:Originally posted by Karnejj: I would even submit that the Firefly 'verse has extremely advanced nanobots already. It would be one of the few ways to do the large-scale terraforming that is hinted at. Either small, versatile machinery that can go everywhere or really big complex machinery that handle various portions of the terraforming job....
Saturday, December 31, 2005 8:54 PM
Saturday, December 31, 2005 9:03 PM
Saturday, December 31, 2005 9:13 PM
Saturday, December 31, 2005 9:31 PM
Sunday, January 1, 2006 5:19 AM
Sunday, January 1, 2006 7:05 AM
CITIZEN
Quote:From CRN (Centre for Responsible Nanotechnology): The popular idea of so-called nanobots, powerful and at risk of running wild, is not part of modern plans for building things “atom-by-atom” by molecular manufacturing. Studies indicate that most people don't know the difference between molecular manufacturing, Nano scale technology, and nanobots. Confusion about terms, fuelled by science fiction, has distorted the truth about advanced nanotechnology. Nanobots are not needed for manufacturing, but continued misunderstanding may hinder research into highly beneficial technologies and discussion of the real dangers. ... Both scientists and the public have gotten the idea that molecular manufacturing requires the use of nanobots, and they may criticize or fear it on that basis. The truth is less sensational, but its implications5 are equally compelling.
Quote:Originally posted by Karnejj: It's nice to think that consciousness is specific to humans by virtue of our meat, but I think it's only ego and vanity.
Sunday, January 1, 2006 8:17 AM
Quote:Originally posted by citizen: Okay firstly on the subject of Nanobots: Karnejj, you seem too want to elevate Nanobot abilities into the magical, being capable of pretty much anything, at a scale far smaller than anything we can currently produce.
Quote: The most advanced Nano scale machines we have are cogs that wear out quickly. When speaking of Nano motors modern technology is referring to motors a little larger than a match head, although small this is still far larger than anything that could be inserted into the blood stream. Likewise we currently can only build the simplest of self replicating machines, and that's on the macro scale. Further more we can't build a macro scale machine with the adaptability of the Nanobots you suggest, so how do we fit this considerable processing power and memory storage into a neat Nano package? Now I'm not saying that someday Nanobots won't be within our grasp, but by the shear fact that in comparison to modern technology Nanobots seem like magic it's a long way off.
Quote: The second question is on the nature of the brain. Quote:Originally posted by Karnejj: It's nice to think that consciousness is specific to humans by virtue of our meat, but I think it's only ego and vanity. I don't believe that Human's alone have sentient consciousness or any of the other things we like to think makes us unique. Most animals can show a certain degree of consciousness.
Quote: What I do believe is that there is more to the Biological brain than simply a meat computer. There's persuasive evidence that Quantum Mechanics plays a role in consciousness, something that can't be modelled. Now remember that a computer is simply a calculator, . . . INPUT -> PROCESS -> OUTPUT Now the brain doesn't work this way. Beyond the obvious that the Brain is analogue rather than digital, conceptually the brain can work on an infinite number of inputs simultaneously. . . . but any one Neuron can communicate with any other Neuron or Neurons (albeit not directly) in order to function.
Quote: Getting back to the fact that a computer is a calculator all it can do is simulate this interaction. Again it's true that neural nets have some success with AI and Learning programs, but is this true learning and true AI? Yes Do these, or could these programs experience consciousness? I don't think so. We can't program or simulate consciousness; I believe it's an emergent property of the Biological brain. A computer can only hope to simulate consciousness, not attain it. What is the mathematics of consciousness, not the outward effects, not the appearance of consciousness, consciousness itself? I think consciousness derives from an immensely complex set of interactions, inputs, outputs and feedbacks. Some of which derives from the Quantum level where Heisenberg’s uncertainty principle comes into play.
Quote: Could we produce an electronic computer that could perfectly simulate the reactions of a Human? Almost certainly. Would that computer be intelligent, yes, would it really be conscious? I don't think so.
Sunday, January 1, 2006 1:08 PM
Quote:Originally posted by Karnejj: Links
Quote:Eeek ... a squirrel more sentient than Star Trek's "Data" ... that's
Quote:It seems that you agree that computers can simulate this in software ... why discount that it can be done physically, as well (not that I believe it's strictly necessary, ... but for the sake of argument).
Quote:There are what ... 4 billion devices connected to the internet. What if we add a program to each of these computers that allows them to communicate in a way that more closely models the way neurons work? This is still a far cry from 100 billion neurons and the quantum effects therein (not to mention lag throughout the internet), but it would possibly allow us enough processing to simulate the personality of a human.
Quote:Ahhh... but why can't billions of processors be lumped together similar to the brain. One of today's most complex computers is the SGI Altix which is powered by a total of 10240 Intel® Itanium® 2 processors. And these are full blown CPUs.
Quote:If we were simply modelling neurons, they'd only have to be able to do two calculations (one being: "fire or not fire") and it would have to store up to about 1000 or so addresses of neighbors which it sends a signal to if it does fire.
Quote:These processors could be made quite small and would certainly be subject to quantum effects as well. And that's only today's technology.
Quote:Who's to say that when that trillion-silicon processor computer tells you that it is certainly sentient, that it is mistaken?
Quote:My basic question is what makes complex carbon-organic neurons so much more special that they can hold sentience, but that man-made silicon or carbon nano-tube neurons cannot? And when humans are creating other sentient beings, I believe that God won't mind.
Sunday, January 1, 2006 3:04 PM
Sunday, January 1, 2006 5:07 PM
Quote:Originally posted by Karnejj: Say Guy #2 doesn't run .. instead he gets his bucket of nanobots and takes his remote control and pushes a few buttons. The nanobots rise out of the bucket and merge together to form bulletproof armor that covers Guy #2. Say, he pushes a few more buttons and some more bots get together to form Jayne's good-ole Vera with other bots forming .50 caliber slugs ... whereupon he asks Guy #1, "Do you feel lucky punk? ... do ya??!" ... That first shot is gonna do more than sting a little .....
Sunday, January 1, 2006 6:07 PM
Sunday, January 1, 2006 7:10 PM
Monday, January 2, 2006 6:01 AM
Quote:Originally posted by GunRunner: Cruise missiles are cheap and can be built by the hundreds ahead of time. Nanobots are expensive and difficult to produce, making sufficient nanobots to build one missile is a time consuming process as is building the missile its self.
Monday, January 2, 2006 6:59 AM
Quote:Originally posted by Karnejj: On the subject of Nanobots, well, the concepts are there, and in 500 years, I would like to think that the field would be heavily researched. There are quite a large number of obstacles to overcome, so my guesses here are pretty shaky. However, onto something I do feel more convicted about ....
Quote:I personally think compelling unprogrammed behavior can emerge from a complex (but quite acheivable) software program.
Quote:Most research I've seen indicates about 1000 connections per neuron, but even if the number is 7000 interconnections per node, it seems to be well within reach extrapolating current technology. The only limitational difference between the internet and the human brain is that the internet is too large to account for the quantum effects that you maintain to hold the key to sentience/consciousness. I believe this scale issue could be solved without any new radical advances, and just with the expected improvements in the current methods of processor construction.
Quote:Neurons operate in a fairly simplistic fashion. They accept inputs of various types and may or may not send out a signal in response.
Monday, January 2, 2006 7:16 AM
Monday, January 2, 2006 7:50 AM
Monday, January 2, 2006 8:43 AM
Quote:Originally posted by GunRunner: The thing about nano-war is that if nations can’t use them on a tactical scale they won’t put much funding in to the weapons. Even NBC weapons are geared towards tactical combat, strategic uses are just political (even ICBMs are considered tactical in many respects). You have to assume that enemy units will have their own defensive nanobots as you said and any use would just piss off the other side and bring the international community down on you if you kill lots of civilians.
Monday, January 2, 2006 10:44 AM
Quote:Originally posted by Karnejj: Now, however, you seem to believe that sentience is basically defined as an emergent property of extreme inter-connectivity in adaptive analog circuits.
Quote:I'm not sure how adamant you are on true sentience requiring quadrillionth place (or better) precision in signal calculations, but I'll assume that you wouldn't make it a strict requirement.
Quote:Other than that, the system I described above should be a fair approximation of the hardware of the human brain. Self-feedback is easily achieved as a low-weight address of itself stored in my electronic "neuron." I still don't see any insurmountable obstacles in the signal propagation, and extrapolating out CURRENT tech to the year 2020 would mean that it would only require about 2000 multi-proc boards, which is probably about the size of a large van.
Quote:Again, there's still more radical techs that I haven't really touched on, which could potentially more easily fit (and even exceed) the hardware requirements you have.
Monday, January 2, 2006 11:44 AM
Monday, January 2, 2006 12:22 PM
Quote:Originally posted by citizen: It's not just displaying those characteristics, but displaying them of its own volition. The creature from the game Black and White showed some interesting emergent characteristics, similar to what may be considered consciousness, yet wasn't.
Quote: Simulated concurrency is not as good as concurrency. The underlying operations are performed serially, the interactions are performed serially, and the results are those of a serial operation, not a parallel one. Quote:Originally posted by Karnejj: Now, however, you seem to believe that sentience is basically defined as an emergent property of extreme inter-connectivity in adaptive analog circuits. There's more too it than that. I certainly don't believe it arises from a greater number of clock cycles within an advanced calculating device .
Quote: Quote:I'm not sure how adamant you are on true sentience requiring quadrillionth place (or better) precision in signal calculations, but I'll assume that you wouldn't make it a strict requirement. If it is anything but exactingly precise (i.e. no fuzziness inherent within the values) then it is merely a simulation with an acceptable value of precision.
Quote: Further more the Brain is not a computer. A computer is a device capable of processing and storing information in accordance with a predetermined set of instructions. That's not the Brain.
Monday, January 2, 2006 1:05 PM
FINN MAC CUMHAL
Monday, January 2, 2006 3:33 PM
Quote:Originally posted by Finn mac Cumhal: The US is not the country with the most nuclear warheads. That distinction goes to Russia, both as the Russian Republic and the Soviet Union, and it has held that distinction since ~1975. The US nuclear arsenal increased to a maximum about 30,000 warheads in ~1965 and then began to fall off as the US started disarming
Monday, January 2, 2006 3:46 PM
Quote:Originally posted by Finn mac Cumhal: And yes, it is sometimes good to be on the side that has the upper-hand, but more important still it is better that the side with the upper-hand be a country with liberal and democratic tendencies and not like those the US would prefer disarmed. Both the Soviets and the Nazis held the upper hand militarily, but it wasn't good to be on their side.
Monday, January 2, 2006 4:04 PM
Monday, January 2, 2006 4:08 PM
Quote:Originally posted by Finn mac Cumhal: Fruitcake.
Monday, January 2, 2006 4:12 PM
Quote:Originally posted by Karnejj: Quote:Originally posted by Finn mac Cumhal: Fruitcake. You must work for "the Man!" So noted!
Monday, January 2, 2006 4:23 PM
Quote:And it's my contention that (just as humans), a sufficiently advanced computer program would be self-aware (conscious/sentient/etc). You like to believe that the key is in the hardware architecture, whereas I like to think that it lies in the learning and information assimilation methods only.
Quote:In other words, I think the architecture of the brain only leads to the learning, but in the end that it is the learning that can give rise to sentience, but that biological neurons are NOT a strict requirement - they ONLY lead to the advanced learning which is required. I would contend that your belief in the causality of self-awareness could be flawed.
Quote:Let's see ... if there is an error in cause and effect, then the following argument should work ... It would be possible to dispute you by going through case studies of people who have suffered brain damage. Would it be possible to find someone who has suffered minor damage, but is no longer a self-aware entity? People in vegetative states, perhaps? For the most part, some of these people's neural connectivity is largely undisturbed, and still have "zillions" of interconnections between neurons, and yet show no self-awareness. Could you dispute me in such a manner? That is, could you find a highly intelligent entity that is NOT self-aware? So far, anything that we describe as intelligent, we also attribute some measure of self-awareness to. Dophins, apes, and even dogs.
Quote:Well .. I don't think either of us believe that all you need is a faster computer ... [But, I do think running a copy of "SoftHuman 2020" would require a rather fast computer.]
Quote:I can't dispute that, but that's getting pretty far from our issue ... even our brains (and, indeed, everything in the universe as it is currently understood) is digital. How many "bits" of precision would you suppose are needed for sentience is my question... If you beleive it is much more than 512 bits of precision or so, then you will have defeated my design being built using current technology.
Quote:You're right .. I haven't disputed that. But, if you think sentience lies in high-levels of interconnectivity with nodes that are small enough to be subject to quantum effects, then THAT, I believe, CAN be reproduced in hardware.
Quote:If you think that sentience lies elsewhere, then you haven't told me where that would be. I couldn't dispute you if you attributed self-awareness to an as-yet-undiscovered property of large collection of meat-based neurons, but that'd be somewhat
Monday, January 2, 2006 4:58 PM
Quote:Originally posted by citizen: Quote:And it's my contention that (just as humans), a sufficiently advanced computer program would be self-aware (conscious/sentient/etc). You like to believe that the key is in the hardware architecture, whereas I like to think that it lies in the learning and information assimilation methods only. Then you'd be dead wrong, no offence meant, but we already have computer programs that can learn just like Humans do, Neural Networks. None has ever obtained consciousness. Ever.
Quote: Furthermore your idea that Learning is the basis for consciousness doesn't seem to make much sense too me. How does the ability to gain and store information give rise to consciousness? Is a Library conscious? Surely my computer is conscious given these criteria? It can store and recall data far faster and efficiently than I can.
Quote: It also suggests that consciousness is dependent on Intelligence, but I think it's actually the other way around...
Quote:I don't believe that Biological Neurons are the only thing that would show this emergent behaviour, I think it's the only thing we currently know or have theorised about that can produce these emergent behaviours. Neurons taken from leeches, I believe, have already shown that they are more efficient at passing signals, and can perform arithmetic. Yet you continue to discount them as anything but simple fire/don't fire mechanisms that would be easily copied.
Quote:I'd also say that Planck’s constant in no way supports the idea that the Universe (or the Brain) is digital.
Quote: How do you model something that doesn't need exact values on something that does?
Quote: Quote:If you think that sentience lies elsewhere, then you haven't told me where that would be. I couldn't dispute you if you attributed self-awareness to an as-yet-undiscovered property of large collection of meat-based neurons, but that'd be somewhat I've alluded to it. Consciousness arises from the huge interconnectivity within the Brain, it comes from the feedback, which is like the brain looking back at itself over and over and over (something that would lock up a silicon chip).
Quote: Again I mean no offence to you here, but I see nothing new. You've devalued the Neuron, as nothing more than a switch (fire/don't fire) when its output is actually a scalar, not a true or false, and its output is dependent on an incredibly large amount of complex variables. You've also questioned whether Humans are indeed conscious.
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Monday, January 2, 2006 5:42 PM
Quote:Originally posted by Karnejj: I think the precedent of the indiscriminate "Fat Boy" and "Little Man" kinda contradict the nicey-nice world you're describing.
Quote:Originally posted by Karnejj: I guess the number of nukes became irrelevent once we had enough to destroy the entire planet more than a couple of times over ... we're still at enough for - what is it? - 80+ times now?
Monday, January 2, 2006 5:43 PM
Quote:Originally posted by citizen: You've mentioned that the Brain is just a meat computer a number of times. The size of the cell is not important for interactions on the Quantum level. For a more detailed discussion on the various ideas about Quantum effects within the Brain can be found here: http://www.arxiv.org/PS_cache/quant-ph/pdf/0204/0204021.pdf As for the interconnectivity, well, we're not even close to being close.
Monday, January 2, 2006 5:47 PM
Quote:Originally posted by GunRunner: Quote:Originally posted by Karnejj: I guess the number of nukes became irrelevent once we had enough to destroy the entire planet more than a couple of times over ... we're still at enough for - what is it? - 80+ times now? Destroy the entire planet? I find it hard to believe someone as smart as you believe those figures...
Monday, January 2, 2006 6:14 PM
CHRISISALL
Monday, January 2, 2006 6:19 PM
Monday, January 2, 2006 6:28 PM
Quote:Originally posted by chrisisall: This is a facinating thread, people, but what I really want to know is: was V'ger a true life form, AND, is Decker living happily ever-after?
Monday, January 2, 2006 6:31 PM
Quote:Originally posted by GunRunner: I think you've seen 'On the Beach' too many times... Have you read this: http://www.oism.org/nwss/s73p906.htm
Monday, January 2, 2006 6:36 PM
Quote:Originally posted by Karnejj: It doesn't take much to create globe-spanning irradiated clouds of ionizing poison.
Monday, January 2, 2006 6:45 PM
Quote:Originally posted by Finn mac Cumhal: Quote:Originally posted by Karnejj: It doesn't take much to create globe-spanning irradiated clouds of ionizing poison. I think, Nuclear testing, Hiroshima, Nagasaki and Chernobyl may prove otherwise. All these cases were events that released large doses of highly radioactive fallout into the atmosphere. The Hiroshima and Nagasaki explosions, while devastating initially, have not had the effect that was predicted. Chernobyl released as much as 50 tones of radioactive ash into the atmosphere, ~400 times the radioactive contamination of Hiroshima. Initial estimates of the immediate casualties were in the thousands to ten’s of thousands and the long term effects were estimated at over a hundred thousand. We now know that the immediate casualties numbered only 54 and the long term effects are now predicted at 4000 causalities. And despite how large the Chernobyl disaster was, the fact of the matter is that nuclear testing during the 50-70s produced as much as a thousand times as much fallout.
Monday, January 2, 2006 6:46 PM
Quote:Originally posted by chrisisall: This is a facinating thread, people, but what I really want to know is: was V'ger a true life form, AND, is Decker living happily ever-after? Chrisisall, suffering wormhole effects
Monday, January 2, 2006 6:52 PM
Quote:Originally posted by Karnejj: Doesn't that bolster my case? That's just a handful of examples and the fallout from one, according to your data, killed 4000 people. So, how much damage would be done by 100 full-strength warheads distributed simultaneously.
Quote:Originally posted by Karnejj: Quote:Originally posted by chrisisall: This is a facinating thread, people, but what I really want to know is: was V'ger a true life form, AND, is Decker living happily ever-after? TROLL!!! But YES, V'ger and Data are ALIVE! As for Decker ... maybe I should've watched the alternate endings?? I hear the director's cut (that I saw) kinda sucked ...
Monday, January 2, 2006 7:00 PM
Quote:Originally posted by chrisisall: Does soul originate from the devine universal battery, waiting for any conduit to express itself, or is it ostensibly and uniquely created by organic and/or artificial (archaic term) synaptic function?
Monday, January 2, 2006 7:03 PM
Quote:Originally posted by Finn mac Cumhal: Quote:Originally posted by chrisisall: what I really want to know is: was V'ger a true life form, AND, is Decker living happily ever-after? Decker and V'ger are one. They are somewhere doing the superluminal belly bump between dimensions. "Each of us... at some time in our lives, turns to someone - a father, a brother, a God... and asks...'Why am I here? What was I meant to be?'"
Quote:Originally posted by chrisisall: what I really want to know is: was V'ger a true life form, AND, is Decker living happily ever-after?
Monday, January 2, 2006 7:08 PM
Quote:Originally posted by Karnejj: If you're asking about sentience (instead of soul), I'd say .. none of the above.
Monday, January 2, 2006 7:20 PM
Quote:Originally posted by Karnejj: Quote:Originally posted by GunRunner: I think you've seen 'On the Beach' too many times... Have you read this: http://www.oism.org/nwss/s73p906.htm Hmmm ... are you saying that the world isn't considered destroyed if a handful of people live on in bomb shelters? Never seen that movie, either .. would you recommend it?
Quote:Originally posted by Karnejj: So, how much damage would be done by 100 full-strength warheads distributed simultaneously at 1000 ft (or so) above ground.
Quote:Originally posted by chrisisall: P.S., only TROLLS believe STTMP kinda sucked, IMHO.
Tuesday, January 3, 2006 5:14 AM
Quote:Originally posted by Karnejj: And all known examples thus far are both quite simplistic and quite limited in the scope of their knowledge. Knowledge structures, to date, have failed to allow a program enough intelligence to reconcile contradictions and to classify and prioritize data efficiently. Once this is done, I believe your coveted self-awareness will be able to arise without any meat around.
Quote:There are no known AI programs, Libraries, or Computer File Systems that exist today which you would consider "highly intelligent." (Correct me if I'm wrong.) Show me one, give me a few months to work with it and I'll show you an sentient artificial entity.
Quote:And this seems to be the key point on which we disagree...
Quote:What else is an individual neuron?? I would guess that only collections of neurons can perform any sort of arithmetic
Quote:If you've got research indicating otherwise, prove it to me and I still won't believe it
Quote:You may turn out to be right ... but so far, that's what the "quanta" in quantum physics means ... and to date it's the best we've got to describe the Universe. So, brains, electrons, neurotransmitters and all work on a digital basis.
Quote:What in the brain, exactly, is it that requires such a high value of precision. If anything, the neural inputs are INTEGERS (i.e. the number of neurotransmitters impinging on the dendrites)!!!
Quote:Some digital gates are actually a group of feedback electronic components. (D-Latches or J/K Flip-Flops if my DC circuits recollection is correct... been a while ) Integrating Op Amps are also capable of feedback. And as stated, my design in one of the above posts takes into consideration feedback.
Quote:Well, I don't think I've devalued anything, (not intentionally anyways .. but if you can show me a single neuron that does arithmetic, that'd certainly be interesting and would add complexity [but not impossibility] to my idea of how much electronic hardware it would take).
Quote:If you look over my proposed "electronic neuron" you'd see I actually propose that it fire 8000 different scalar values ... so, I didn't just propose a simplistic binary switch.
Quote: It's kinda straying rather far from debating the possibility of sentient AI, but ... Yes, I do question the sentience of humans, and not just on a subjective level. There's no way that you can be sure that I'm sentient. You only believe I'm sentient by projecting your own personal subjective experience onto me and assuming I feel similar things.
Tuesday, January 3, 2006 7:05 AM
Quote:Originally posted by citizen: People have been working on Neural Net's for quite some time. The current design has been around for over 20 years. An incredible amount of research has been done in the field. As it hasn't been done yet I'd suggest that it's not as simple as you suggest.
Quote: I also don't see where you get the idea that NNs don't prioritise or classify inputted data efficiently. That's pretty much what they're designed to do. Also many modern NNs actually can handle contradictions, consider a Speech Recognition that has too handle the contradictory pronunciations of the same word .
Quote: Also remember that the Brain isn't all that great with contradictions, think about that picture, whether you see the faces or the candlestick is unimportant, the important thing is that you can't see both at the same time. Think about Cognitive Dissonance, the brain has to unlearn and then relearn, or merely ignore the contradictory data.
Quote: Furthermore I thought it was Learning ability that was the requirement to Consciousness? What I mean is do you thus believe that if you kept a Human Brain in a vat and only fed it limited information that it would never become conscious.
Quote: Quote:There are no known AI programs, Libraries, or Computer File Systems that exist today which you would consider "highly intelligent." (Correct me if I'm wrong.) Show me one, give me a few months to work with it and I'll show you an sentient artificial entity. You mentioned Learning and Information recall, not intelligence .
Quote: Quote:And this seems to be the key point on which we disagree... Machines have shown problem solving intelligence, but not Human Intelligence. Intelligence is a tool of our consciousness; consciousness is not a tool of Intelligence. Consider the chess match between Kasparov and Deep Blue.
Quote: Quote:What else is an individual neuron?? I would guess that only collections of neurons can perform any sort of arithmetic It is only one Neuron that does the calculation; there are a few others to store the values. Some neurons act as memory, with a final Neuron acting as the 'calculator'. The point is the calculation is performed on a single Neuron, so they are more complex than a simple switch.
Quote:The assumption that the universe is digital doesn't follow from neither Planck’s constant nor Quantum Mechanics. Even given that there are finite energy states too Quanta, as well as a number of other things, there is no finite step to time
Quote: Quote:What in the brain, exactly, is it that requires such a high value of precision. If anything, the neural inputs are INTEGERS (i.e. the number of neurotransmitters impinging on the dendrites)!!! The electrical signal strength of the direct Neuron connections and the signal strength within the Neurons would be best described as real numbers.
Quote: Quote:Some digital gates are actually a group of feedback electronic components. (D-Latches or J/K Flip-Flops if my DC circuits recollection is correct... been a while ) Integrating Op Amps are also capable of feedback. And as stated, my design in one of the above posts takes into consideration feedback. None of that is like the feedback capabilities of the Human brain. This point would take an entire book to explain in itself, I suggest Gödel, Escher, Bach by Douglas R. Hofstadter as one of the best.
Quote: Quote:If you look over my proposed "electronic neuron" you'd see I actually propose that it fire 8000 different scalar values ... so, I didn't just propose a simplistic binary switch. That isn't at all mentioned in your proposal. There's certainly no mention of Scalar values.
Quote: Both chaos theory and the uncertainty principle have the implication that we can't know what someone will do with 100% certainty. People still surprise us everyday, so I think it's a moot point.
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