Thank you.

The plan is to develop in parallel the two Russian-thinking programs
http://ai.neocities.org/perlmind.txt and http://ai.neocities.org/Dushka.html
so that the more accessible Dushka AI will persuade Russian-speakers to
acquire also the ghost.pl bilingual AI.

http://ai.neocities.org/RuThink.html is one of about ten special
documentation webpages for Russian AI Minds. Even as we code new mental
functionality in JavaScript, we need to translate the new code into Perl
for publication on the ten webpages.

We will know that AGI is happening if some visiting Russian scientist
reveals the existence of large teams of AI coders building up the Russian
AI Minds in Perl or Python or various other programming languages.
Mind-design is a very slow and arduous process, but the Russians, who were
first into space and first to the dark side of the moon, have a knack for
scientific and cultural advances.

Bye for now,

Mentifex (Arthur)
-- 
http://ai.neocities.org/IIPJ2019.html -- Russian AI Programming Journal

On Mon, May 27, 2019 at 2:35 AM Greg Staskowski <[email protected]> wrote:

> Kraseeva.
>
> Very beautiful. Thank you for your efforts. Tovarisch.
>
> [-)
>
> On Sun, May 26, 2019 at 10:55 AM A.T. Murray <[email protected]>
> wrote:
>
>> After the conversion of the Mens Latina AI into a total replacement of
>> the Dushka Russian AI, we must troubleshoot two faulty behaviors. Although
>> yesterday we brought the Russian knowledge base from the bilingual
>> ghost.pl AI in Perl into the Dushka AI, one Russian sentence does not
>> seem to be doing its job. The sentence "Я ЗНАЮ СТУДЕНТА" for "I know a
>> student" is meant to trigger the operation of the SpreadAct() module,
>> passing activation from the concept of "student" as an accusative direct
>> object to the same concept of "student" serving as the nominative subject
>> of a separate sentence, "СТУДЕНТЫ ЧИТАЮТ КНИГИ". That Russian statement of
>> "Students read books" is meant in turn to serve as a logical premise for
>> the eventual operation of the InFerence() module in Russian, so that we may
>> tell the AI "Anna is a student" and the robot mind will ask us in Russian,
>> "Does Anna read books?" If you ask us why we are so slow to code the
>> InFerence() module in Russian, Bill, the answer depends upon what the
>> meaning of the word "is" is. Russians don't use the word "is" to say that
>> Anna is a student. They just say "Anna -- student" and the word "is" is
>> understood. Of course, both Russian and Latin often leave out the personal
>> pronoun for the subject of a verb, and our work-around for that situation
>> is to instantiate a hidden pronominal concept that does the conceptual work
>> of the imputed subject by means of quasi-neuronal associative tags. We plan
>> to use a similar work-around for the Russian InFerence() module in both
>> Perl and JavaScript, creating a hidden concept for the idea of "is" so that
>> the logical InFerence() module may seize upon membership in a class (e.g.,
>> students) to make a silent inference and then ask the user, "Does Anna read
>> books?" But let us get back to the idea of "student" triggering a general
>> statement about students.
>>
>> Let us first go into the SpreadAct() module and briefly insert a
>> JavaScript "alert" box to tell us as AI Mind maintainers if the Russian
>> word for "student" is triggering the SpreadAct() module. We do so, also
>> having the alert-box tell us the value of the actpsi variable which
>> indicates what "psi" concept is to be activated by the SpreadAct() module.
>> We discover that SpreadAct() is being called not only for "student" in
>> Russian but also for "nothing" in the Russian sentence "Я ВИЖУ НИЧЕГО"
>> which is supposed to mean "I see nothing" but lacks the Russian double
>> negative. That sentence is included in the AI to encourage people like
>> Rodney Brooks and Hans Moravec to embody the AI Mind in a robot with a
>> sense of vision. Anyway, now that we know that the activand actpsi concept
>> is being passed into SpreadAct(), let us try raising the level of imposed
>> activation to see if a new idea about the concept of "student" occurs to
>> the Russian AI. We remember that we had lowered the level of spreading
>> activation while we were coding AI in Latin. No, it didn't work. Let us see
>> if the particular area of SpreadAct() is being called. Yes it is, but still
>> gthere is no success. Let us try a rather drastic troubleshooting measure.
>> We go into the psiList() code and we briefly set the nonce value to a
>> unitary one ("1") so that Diagnostic mode will show us the entire contents
>> of conceptual and auditory memory, not just the data after the usual nonce
>> time of launching the AI. It looks like no activation is being passed.
>> Another alert-box confirms that activation is not being passed. We inspect
>> the Russian MindBoot() sequence and we discover that there is no tkb value
>> being seclared for "student" in the Russian idea of "Students read books."
>> Let us check the ghost.pl AI code in Perl. The associative tags are
>> correct in Perl, but we did not install them properly in JavaScript. Let us
>> now correct them. Ah, finally! The transfer of activation now works
>> properly. Lets us be satisfied with this one bugfix and upload our code.
>>
>> http://medium.com/p/c70305326e73 -- Debugging JavaScript Dushka AI in
>> Russian
>> http://ai.neocities.org/IIPJ2019.html --  Искусственный Интеллект
>> Programming Journal
>>
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