Jim, It just reminded me of the Gardenfors work -- I was being at all
dismissive of your posts. I was just pointing the work out in case you
were not familiar with it. On the whole, I'm not dismissive of
anybody's ideas in AGI. It's all a wide open space IMO.

On 6/11/19, Jim Bromer <[email protected]> wrote:
> I remember that someone kept dismissing my notion of conceptual relativism
> and finally he mentioned some book that had been written 40 or 50 years ago
> which had mentioned that concepts were relative. I wondered - could it be
> true? Could someone have examined conceptual relativism decades ago? I did
> not find the book that he mentioned but I did find references to it and I
> found work that was done by the authors around the time the book was
> published. The authors mentioned a lot about the fact that concepts are
> relative and nothing about the notion that concepts are relativistic. It
> would be tedious of me to go over the difference again, but there is a
> major difference. The idea that I am talking about something that had been
> settled and the closed 20 or 50 years ago is dismissive. But it is also
> amusing because it means you are all chasing the latest fads (which are
> admittedly making great advances) while leaving the field of my special
> interests free, open, and unsullied for me. So thank you for not getting
> it. (I am not being cranky, I really believe that we are representative of
> the areas of interest that other people are pursuing, some much more
> effectively than we are, and this mini sampling indicates that there is
> something here that might be worthwhile for me to examine partly because
> there is not going to be much competition.)
> Jim Bromer
>
>
> On Tue, Jun 11, 2019 at 12:54 PM Mike Archbold <[email protected]> wrote:
>
>> This topic reminds me of this book from almost 20 years ago:
>>
>> https://mitpress.mit.edu/books/conceptual-spaces
>>
>>
>>
>> On 6/11/19, [email protected] <[email protected]> wrote:
>> >  Generative Neural Networks, GAN.
>> >  This give give a relation from stating image or data to another.
>> >
>> > Latent Space Human Face Synthesis | Two Minute Papers #191:
>> > https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aR6M0MQBo2w
>> >
>> >   A  programmer select two images or data points.
>> >   A  programmer put in 50 percent value into a GAM and train it to be
>> > 50
>> > percent transformation
>> > between to faces.  This 50 percent value is called a "latent value"
>> >
>> >  Latent value can used for mapping distance in weight space.
>> >
>> https://towardsdatascience.com/graduating-in-gans-going-from-understanding-generative-adversarial-networks-to-running-your-own-39804c283399
>> >
>> >  The latent value can be used to make movement vectors through weight
>> > space:
>> > https://poloclub.github.io/ganlab/
>> >
>> >  Unsupervised GAN's are the way of the brain, artificial or real:
>> >
>> https://www.academia.edu/37275998/A_Nice_Artificial_General_Intelligence_How_To_Make_A_Nice_Artificial_General_Intelligence

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