Saturday, June 23, 2007, Lukasz Stafiniak wrote:

LS> Obligatory reading:
LS> http://www.cs.ualberta.ca/~sutton/book/ebook/the-book.html

I think AI books are not particularly helpful, not at first (if you know
enough about algorithms, programming and math, generally).
AI provides technical answers to well-formulated
questions, but with AGI right questions is what's lacking.

I'm in the early research stage myself, and I found cognitive science
papers very thought-provoking, if not directly instructive. If project
bias is to be not too far from human-like high-level operation, one
can estimate how particular approach looks from points of view
described in that literature.

So, my current reading is
The Cambridge Handbook of Thinking and Reasoning.
http://www.cambridge.org/uk/catalogue/catalogue.asp?isbn=0521531012

-- 
 Vladimir Nesov                            mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]

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