John,
Now your writings are beginning to sound like Jean Piaget's.
From: [email protected]
To: [email protected]
Subject: RE: [agi] Analog Computation
Date: Thu, 12 Jul 2012 07:07:04 -0400
I thought that self-organizing systems are routinely created and hosted within
software environments. An example would be a multi-agent host where the agents
congregate and spontaneously emerge a relatively coordinated behavior that
solves some individually unrelated goal. A problem is taming the
self-organization across complexity barriers in such a way as to reach higher
thresholds of sophistication, perhaps going through multiple stages of
self-organization to optimize problem solving abilities using computational
expense minimizations awarded though the coordinating of the self-organization
superstructure. That superstructure being a systems automata which imposes
feedback through itself, across internal complexity regions, while learning
symbiotically with its informational environment. In this particular construct
I described maybe the overall superstructure behavior and coordination is
analogish, versus the individual self-organizing being more constructed
digitally. Analog control itself being a self-organized resultant, a fine
tuner. Just some thoughts… John
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