Consider a ship. From one point of view, you could separate the people aboard 
into two groups: the captain and the crew. But another just as reasonable 
point of view is that captain is just one member of the crew, albeit one 
distinguished in some ways. 
One could reasonably take the point of view that the executive functions in a 
mind are performed by a module that is not all that much different in kind 
from the other ones, it just happens to be the one that is the fixpoint of 
the "controller of" relation in the architecture graph.

Josh

On Sunday 06 May 2007 00:18, Mike Tintner wrote:
> ...
> The human mind consists of a two-tier structure. On top, you have this
> conscious, executive mind that takes most of the decisions about which way
> the system will go - basically does the steering. On bottom, you have the
> unconscious, subordinate mind that does nearly all the information
> processing, both briefing and executing the executive mind's decisions,
> putting the words in its mouth and forming the thoughts in its head, while
> continually pressuring the executive mind with conflicting emotions, and at
> the same time monitoring and controlling the immensely complex operations
> of the body.
...
>
> You guys think you can have a successful AGI without the same basic
> structure?

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