Brilliant! Have you read biology of Knowkedge by Rupert Reidl, a German evolutionary epistemologist. Inspired by Konrad Lorenz work on ethology, he traces roots of sense making in nature. You have very lucidly described the process of evolving intelligence which explains not just wisdom but also our foolishness, naïveté! That is paradoxical - a word I was intrigued by not finding it in the text. Did I miss it ? But u do allude to divergence but not contradictions. Human brain has a special
Ability to love with contradictions s without engine if thought, action & feeling ( even memory) breaking down. It plays tricks, it surprises us with our make believe stories. Write more. You have a way with words. Congratulations ; great testing today morning when m on my way to Nalanda university:::hod bless
Brilliant... as usual. Probably my favourite so far of all your posts. Intelligence viewed through this lens simply seems like an inherent quality of the universe - which I think actually is a rather reasonable assumption - in which case, there truly is a long way to even get to artificial "intelligence", let alone "superintelligence"?
Brilliant! Have you read biology of Knowkedge by Rupert Reidl, a German evolutionary epistemologist. Inspired by Konrad Lorenz work on ethology, he traces roots of sense making in nature. You have very lucidly described the process of evolving intelligence which explains not just wisdom but also our foolishness, naïveté! That is paradoxical - a word I was intrigued by not finding it in the text. Did I miss it ? But u do allude to divergence but not contradictions. Human brain has a special
Ability to love with contradictions s without engine if thought, action & feeling ( even memory) breaking down. It plays tricks, it surprises us with our make believe stories. Write more. You have a way with words. Congratulations ; great testing today morning when m on my way to Nalanda university:::hod bless
Will
Like your comments on my note on Ai+ri -
https://substack.com/@anilkg/note/c-138695256?r=2jkij&utm_medium=ios&utm_source=notes-share-action
A very analytical diagnosis/ analysis of how the human intelligence is a result of so many aspects which AI cannot compete as of today .
Brilliant... as usual. Probably my favourite so far of all your posts. Intelligence viewed through this lens simply seems like an inherent quality of the universe - which I think actually is a rather reasonable assumption - in which case, there truly is a long way to even get to artificial "intelligence", let alone "superintelligence"?