thing or overlap
significantly ;].
John
From: Brad Paulsen [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Monday, April 14, 2008 5:17 AM
To: agi@v2.listbox.com
Subject: [agi] Posting Strategies - A Gentle Reminder
Dear Fellow AGI List Members:
Just thought I'd remind the good members of this list
:* [agi] Posting Strategies - A Gentle Reminder
Dear Fellow AGI List Members:
Just thought I'd remind the good members of this list about some
strategies for dealing with certain types of postings.
Unfortunately, the field of AI/AGI is one of those areas where anybody
with a pulse
programming language autonomically while
astral projecting back into the primordial ooze!
Reply:
Ahh dude. seek help!
John
From: Steve Richfield [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Tuesday, April 15, 2008 5:45 PM
To: agi@v2.listbox.com
Subject: Re: [agi] Posting Strategies - A Gentle Reminder
Dear Fellow AGI List Members:
Just thought I'd remind the good members of this list about some strategies for
dealing with certain types of postings.
Unfortunately, the field of AI/AGI is one of those areas where anybody with a
pulse and a brain thinks they can design a program that thinks.
Good advice. There are of course sometimes people who are ahead of the
field, but in conversation you'll usually find that the genuine inovators
have a deep - bordering on obsessive - knowledge of the field that they're
working in and are willing to demonstrate/test their claims to anyone even
Bob Mottram writes:
Good advice. There are of course sometimes
people who are ahead of the field,
Like Ben Goertzel (glad to send him a referral
recently from South Africa on the OpenCog list :-)
but in conversation you'll usually find that the
genuine inovators have a deep - bordering
These things of course require a balance.
In many academic or corporate fora, radical innovation is frowned upon
so profoundly (in spite of sometimes being praised and desired, on the
surface, but in a confused and not fully sincere way), that it's continually
necessary to remind people of the