Explain how Copycat can be applied to diverse patterns [it’s a terribly 
unimaginative program that in no way solved the problem Hofstadter set himself].

Patterns *are* essentially algorithms.[This is one area where Ben and I may 
well agree – though he may want to be cussed tonight].

If you have a regular relationship of parts – as in a pattern – then you can 
immediately infer a regular course of action – a regular way of physically 
combining those parts and constructing that pattern,, i.e. an 
algorithm.Conversely, an algorithm is a way of constructing a pattern, i.e. set 
of variations on a pattern.

From: [email protected] 
Sent: Thursday, August 23, 2012 9:22 PM
To: AGI 
Subject: Re: [agi] Boris Explains His Theory

You should read up on Douglas Hofstadter's Copycat software, along with his 
other related projects. While it may be true that there are fundamentally 
different kinds of patterns that can't be generalized, some approaches to 
manipulating those patterns *can* be generalized.

And there's a key difference between an algorithm that produces all algorithms 
vs. a pattern that encompasses all patterns. Patterns are *representational*, 
not algorithmic. This means that they need to be complete to be useful, and it 
is permissible to leave some parts unrepresented or under-represented, unlike 
with algorithms. 

This is core to how the human mind processes things. It's why we can see the 
truth of the self-referential statements used in Gödel's incompleteness 
theorems, but no algorithm can *prove* their truth. We function on 
representational principles, not algorithmic ones, and the algorithms we 
implement merely allow us to extend those representations within certain 
subdomains of reliable deducibility.




--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
On Aug 23, 2012 2:56 PM, Mike Tintner <[email protected]> wrote: 


Ben: that's easy, these [[all patterns]]  are all obviously susceptible to 
lossy compression using algorithms native to the brain...

Total shameless waffle. You haven’t the slightest idea of what you’re talking 
about, any more than when you claimed a program could produce all Da Vinci’s 
paintings.

Explain how a single algorithm can produce the first three patterns AND then 
any example of a cellular automaton AND then any patterns which will be 
produced for your algorithm AFTER you have defined it. If you have a concept of 
“pattern”, that’s what you must be able to do – embrace not only known patterns 
but also all patterns yet to be created.

How IOW are you proposing that a single algorithm can identify/produce *any* 
kind of elements in *any* kind of regular relationships?

And while you’re at it, you might as well explain how a single algorithm can 
identify/produce **any and all** algorithms – because that is essentially the 
same claim you are making. If there’s a pattern for all patterns, there’s an 
algorithm for all algorithms. And there’s a formula for all formulae.

Total cobblers. Reality: patterns, algorithms and formulae are specialist 
through and through, with no AGI powers of generalization whatsoever.

From: Ben Goertzel 
Sent: Thursday, August 23, 2012 1:37 PM
To: AGI 
Subject: Re: [agi] Boris Explains His Theory




  If you want to put that mathematically, take a whole set of diverse patterns 
– Koch curve, Mandelbrot, herringbone, cellular automaton etc . etc. – and 
explain how the brain is able to abstract from *all of them together* and 
recognize them collectively as “patterns”  (and not just as Koch 
curves/herringbones etc. etc).

  Where’s the pattern in a set of diverse patterns, B & B? And where’s the 
complexity, Jim?


that's easy, these are all obviously susceptible to lossy compression using 
algorithms native to the brain...

ben 
      AGI | Archives  | Modify Your Subscription   

      AGI | Archives  | Modify Your Subscription  

      AGI | Archives  | Modify Your Subscription   



-------------------------------------------
AGI
Archives: https://www.listbox.com/member/archive/303/=now
RSS Feed: https://www.listbox.com/member/archive/rss/303/21088071-c97d2393
Modify Your Subscription: 
https://www.listbox.com/member/?member_id=21088071&id_secret=21088071-2484a968
Powered by Listbox: http://www.listbox.com

Reply via email to