Alan Watts, and to some extent Pierre Grimes analysing
Plato, gave me some good thoughts on this. 

If we weren't neural networks, prone to classification,
the question might be, are there different kinds of
intelligence? Or is what we do, (throwing boundaries 
around things and concepts), intelligence by definition
only?




On Fri, 20 May 2011 13:01:54 +0800
Chris McCormick <ch...@mccormick.cx> wrote:

> On Thu, May 19, 2011 at 05:12:09PM +0200, Bryan Jurish wrote:
> > If forty-two trees fall in a forest and no one is around to count them

>  When the trees fall, something is happening on the space time manifold, 
>  but I don't think it's accurate to say without the computational aparatus 
> to perceive it that "42 trees are falling".


-- 
Andy Farnell <padawa...@obiwannabe.co.uk>

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