I think Matt's last post is wrong about the idea of the randomness of
a string but I am really supposed to be working.
I think John's abstract example would constitute an example of what I
was thinking about but there are also other exemplars, both abstract
and explicit.
Jim Bromer

On Thu, Oct 11, 2018 at 1:37 PM Matt Mahoney via AGI
<[email protected]> wrote:
>
> On Thu, Oct 11, 2018 at 12:38 PM John Rose <[email protected]> wrote:
> > OK, what then is between a compression agents perspective (or any agent for 
> > that matter) and randomness? Including shades of randomness to relatively 
> > "pure" randomness.
>
> A string is random if there is no shorter description of the string.
> Obviously this depends on which language you use to write
> descriptions. Formally, a description is a program that outputs the
> string. There are no "shades" of randomness. A string is random or
> not, but there is no general algorithm to distinguish them in any
> language. If there were, then AIXI and thus general intelligence would
> be computable.
>
> > From an information theoretic (and thermodynamic) viewpoint in your mind 
> > what happens when you see the symbol for infinity? Semi-quantitatively 
> > describe the thought processes?
> 
> The same thing that happens when you see any other symbols like "2" or
> "+". Mathematics is the art of discovering rules for manipulating
> symbols that help us make real world predictions.
> 
> --
> -- Matt Mahoney, [email protected]

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