lol  It will be your turn to remind me next time.

-- Sent from my Palm Pre
On Oct 26, 2012 2:35 PM, Todor Arnaudov <[email protected]> wrote: 

@Aaron,
>Just give up, Todor. It doesn't matter if you're right or wrong. He's taken 
a stance that won't let him think he's wrong, even when he is. He'll re-
>interpret what you've said to something else so he can pick it apart. He'll 
change the subject when he can't come up with a good argument. He'll 
>directly contradict the truth by denying you've done/said something you 
just did, or by relabeling it as something entirely different. He doesn't 
want 
>to find the truth; he wants to convince you he's already found it. He 
doesn't realize that there's a trade-off between feeling right and being right 
-- that 
>the humility to recognize your own failures and shortcomings as such is the 
very thing that makes you able to overcome them. It's more important to 
>him to look right than to actually be it.

Thanks for the advice... You are right, and I always give up, then give another 
shot. :X I guess I'll give up in this iteration in a bit... :)

Mike:>Wherever you look in the natural world, you DON’T see uniform blocks 
– you see groups of irregular, individual BLOBS – indeed PATCHWORKS of 
blobs – >rocks, earth, cells, tissues, living bodies, they’re all made 
of blobs, not blocks..

Todor:
Have you ever heard of "particle physics", atoms, protons, neutrons, electrons, 
quantum physics, quants. A "blocks" means a "building blocks". Yes, in nature 
there are more of spheres than rectangles or cubes, it's a simpler form, 
requiring less variables to define, but it's a "building block either".

The  first *known* hypothesis for the atoms is made thousands of years 
ago, it's possible that people thought that tens of thousands years ago.
What physics discovers is that world is ultimately made exactly of uniform 
"blocks", having absolutely identical properties. 

Mike:>Science always makes mathematically simplified models of the world. 
What you’re arguing is equivalent to saying Newton’s calculus proved that 
curves are made 
>of rectangles. They’re not – that’s a useful and brilliant formal 
simplification – in fact, translation.

Todor: BTW, you're repeating a philosopher I've been arguing a decade ago, 
he was blaming science for "simplifying things" - well if you can understand 
things and can predict their behavior, you "simplify" them. If you cannot 
understand, you take is a whole and just copy it. Yet the ones who don't 
understand it (and can't simplify it in a workable fashion) cannot really 
understand the "simple things". Please design for me a simple digital computer, 
say equivalent of an Apple][, or not that complex, let it be like Whirlwind. 
Those kind of "simplified" concepts are simple only in theory, and if taken out 
 of their complex and real application.

Yes,  "curves" and integrals are simplifications, the real world is made 
of bosons and fermions, of 10E+3894938493 particles - so how should you process 
it like that? How do you process electrons or quarks, and does your retina or 
brain knew initially what an electron is?

"Curves" are just images on your retina, or sequences of neuronal activities 
when touching objects etc., and maths allows if you know some measures of those 
curves (in terms of the sensory matrices) to predict (compute) some other 
measures, which are not directly observable by the regular sensory matrix.


Mike: >Rational technology INVENTED uniform blocks – it was one of 
the greatest, most imaginative inventions in history – and you 
“block-headsâ€? think they 
>*discovered* them -  bricks, for example, and perfect rectangles, you 
think,  *always* existed. Nonsense.

Todor:

Your notion of "imaginative" is pathetic, perhaps you think this is "the most 
imaginative art" are the rectangles of 
Malevic:http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Malevich.black-square.jpg

The uniform blocks, especially triangles or rectangles are the less 
imaginative (the easiest, the simplest - I've explained this before), and 
Universe is built of uniform blocks,  nature at larger scale, seen with 
naked eye either: insects (see a bunch of ants from the above), their eyes; 
bees's cells, nails, hair, grass; sand (!),  leaves, fingers, eyes, 
trees in a forest; animals from the same species - see a flight of sparrows 
from a distance, or a pack of wolves, or look at the stars or the planets; 
humans either. 

Connect 4 points and you get a "rectangle", try to build a house with the 
fewest possible number of walls/parts and you get first a triangle, then make a 
compromise and use 4, which will give you twice the area for a small overhead - 
and there you go, that's a rectangle/tetragon. Why trying to do it with the 
fewest number of elements? Because it's a hard work, you get tired, have to 
hunt, to walk around in a search for food etc. That's why one would search for 
the simplest solution at the moment.

Is it clear now how it can be "invented" from scratch, how that "new element" 
can be created... Of course, for humans who cannot generalize it, that's not 
rectangle, these are just "trees",  they are "not uniform", "don't have 
exact dimensions" (in pre-stone age - right) etc., You reason so, because you 
cannot get the meaning of "generalization" and "resolution".

For example, let's see "the greatest invention" - the wheel. Well, who said 
it's so great? It's absolutely trivial!

Have you ever looked at the sky? In the stone age there wasn't TV or light 
bulbs, so you were supposed to see the moon and learn what a circle is from the 
very early age.
In fact you learned even without the moon - have you seen your mother's eyes? 
They are circular, they have several circles, they are even spherical. Humans 
have probably seen the eyes of dead mammals either.

The moon is a "wheel", the eyes are wheels, they roll. The trees are also 
circular and can roll. There's nothing ingenious in "inventing" the wheel.

The problem is that modern people usually have a hard time thinking in terms of 
the context of the inventions - first they don't realize all those examples of 
wheels, and second they don't realize that the wheels require roads. 

How would you use a wheel for travelling, if you're surrounded by a dense 
forest and all around is muddy? For the wheel to make sense, roads are needed, 
or a dry place with flat areas where the wheels/cut stems of trees could roll. 
In case of trees - you must have technology and energy to cut trees that are 
big enough, and to slice or "delve" them to make wheels, or to have technology 
to dry and bend wood and connect pieces in order to make discus etc., and also 
have the energy to cut enough trees to make a road etc.
 I.e. the wheel itself is not the problem, the other technological 
difficulties are. 
Also you must have horses or other strong animals (first they had to be 
domesticated) to drive such heavy clumsy and probably not quite circular wheels 
(having a lot of friction), otherwise they are useless for transportation 
- not surprising that the first wheels were used for making pottery(?).

Mike>The problem of AGI is always – if we’re talking formally, 
quasi-mathematically – to deal with blobs and patchworks of blobs.
>But obviously, this kind of discussion is too high-falutin’ without 
examples, and specific analyses.

Todor:
A bullshit, I've analyzed your "blobs" too, and give more than explicit 
examples and analyses.

Mike:>The general point is: you have not and will not show any uniform 
blocks to underlie those chairs, or the concept of CHAIR – or **any concept 
period**.  

In fact I already have shown the uniform blocks of the concept of "chair", 
regarding your last "blobs" - sure - those are not chairs - "coma". They are 
"chairs" only in your head, because you say they are chairs or because you have 
copied them from images labeled as "chairs". In fact it's just 2D black-white 
image - "exclamation sign", you can label any thing as a "chair", in fact it's 
just an image, in this case the rest is arbitrary label. 

The "blobs" on that particular image can be represented exactly in the 
resolution of this image as very simple functions - that means if using those 
functions the same looking "blobs" can be redrawn at another place, and by 
adjusting or transforming their free variables they can be drawn as bigger, 
smaller, inclined, rotated etc. If one see those and the other "blobs", and 
asked, he'll recognize them as similar.

As of the real (3D) chars - I take the challenge, my thinking machine is 
supposed to categorize them and give them a name without supervision, also to 
design any "infinitely varied blah-blah never ending" new kinds of 
chairs, I even have explained how it works. However I just note for the 
ones who does get generalizing - they will seem as "radically new, novel 
elements, blah-blah" for ones who don't understand generalization. In essence, 
their "chair-defining" properties would be the same, otherwise apparently they 
wouldn't be recognizable as chairs, except in - as mentined - arbitrary labeled 
sets, which are randomly labeled.

"Concepts" live in your head and in mind, in the real world yes, there are no 
"concepts", but mind cannot operate mentally with the real world, it can 
operate only with concepts derived from its sensory matrices space, and the 
sensory matrices are finite, "rectangular", "circular", "uniform" etc.

Much more objective elements are "the particles" and measures based on their 
properties; if you prefer "wave functions", "number of hydrogen atoms 
diameters" etc.  but unfortunately for your point, these measures seem to 
be exactly uniform, regular etc.

Besides that  brain or any system except the original Universe cannot 
process them at their original resolution. The experience have shown - brain or 
a machine don't have to model them at their original resolution, a TV with a 
low resolution or a video of 320x240 or half this is enough to see a lot. The 
mathematical physical models work ever finer (and their resolution grows, 
though), i.e. they produce correct predictions.

Mike:>If anyone wants to talk specifics and analyse forms as I did, I’m 
delighted. Vague generalisations alone don’t cut it.

You did what??? Yes, "vague" generalization that you can't get don't cut for 
you, it will "cut" your bullshit when we do create the thinking "terminators" 
to finish your confusions. (Relax, just the confusions.)


--- Todor "Tosh" Arnaudov ---

-- Twenkid Research:  http://research.twenkid.com


-- Self-Improving General Intelligence 
Conference: http://artificial-mind.blogspot.com/2012/07/news-sigi-2012-1-first-sigi-agi.html


-- Todor Arnaudov's Researches Blog: http://artificial-mind.blogspot.com





  
    
      
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