I would agree that you also need mult-strategy reasoning in addition to 
correlations.  
Look at Rysard Michalski's work on dynamically interlaced hierarchies. He has a 
fast and efficient mechanism for inference.  He inspired me.
Cheers,
~PM.


Date: Tue, 4 Dec 2012 18:36:20 -0500
Subject: Re: [agi] Internal Representation
From: [email protected]
To: [email protected]

I discovered something about logic that I never knew before.  It is something 
that I have thought about for 40 years, but I never stopped to explore the 
application.  Now, shouldn't this new insight give me greater understanding?  
Well, yeah, but it doesn't work that way.  I have a new insight but I haven't 
got any use for it.  So now I have to try to find some practical use for it.  
Well even though I don't have any use for it, I might pick up some street creds 
by telling other people about it right?  Well no, not really.  It is really a 
turn-the-crank kind of thing and the fact that I thought about it for so long 
without ever once examining its application is kind of embarrassing.  So now, 
before I can talk about it I have to search for some way to use the idea 
effectively.  If I found some utility for it then I could pick up some credit 
for it, but until then it is just going to make my work with logic more 
complicated.
 The insight was a turn-the-crank kind of insight so it represented the 
application of a familiar idea onto another familiar idea in a way that was 
very familiar to me.  The only thing I did different was to actually see how it 
worked in a few examples.  When I did that I realized that the effects were not 
exactly what I expected.  However, logic is an artificial field which is well 
formed so that other logic-based ideas, like something from mathematics, can 
sometimes be easily integrated into it.  In real world examples of ideative 
projection, the analysis of turn-the-crank imagination cannot easily be 
achieved just by using other (integrated or related) methods of internal 
ideative projection.  And as I just explained, simple correlation methods are 
not an easy substitute for insightful methods. 
 Jim Bromer  



  
    
      
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