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T-Bit Project
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Demo
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The almanac about new method of information processing
What's actually wrong with the concept of AI
Biology and artificial intelligence
Cognitive science: a beginning without an end
Holism and brain studies
Theory of Active Perception
Why perception is necessary for modeling human-like thinking
What's actually wrong with the concept of AI
Evolution of ideas underlying AI: Brief Description
Biology does not understand how the brain works
Why AI does need biology after all
How far artificial neurons are from the real ones
Creating something really similar to how the brain works
Cognitive science: a beginning without an end
Cognitive science has never produced anything practical
Consciousness is not amenable to science
No one knows what consciousness is, everyone keeps talking about it
A sudden idea — the quantum nature of consciousness
Orchestrated objective reduction: what it is and what for
Another theory of consciousness: the integrated information theory
Global workspace theory
Conscious and unconscious thinking. Questions to an academic
Questions for Theories of Consciousness
Ultimate ways to study consciousness without cutting into the brain
Albert Einstein suspected something
Why has psychoanalysis progressed more than science without scientific methods
Insights from intuition and deep observation are not exhausted and are as good as AI
There is no computation in the brain as we all know it. What kind is there?
Why it’s unreasonable to use word Learning in relation to AI
There is a different calculability: what Hilbert and Gödel discovered
Why the brain should be studied as a whole
TAPe models the workings of the mechanisms of perception
Language is a complete system, it’s how it should be studied
The principles by which the Language of Thought functions
The isomorphism of Chinese characters and TAPe
T-Bit: a unit of information 1000x of times more efficient
Cognitive science:
a beginning without an end
01
Cognitive science is a term explaining or revealing that the brain is not only or not so much a biological entity. The term “cognitive” was basically coined by scientists not satisfied with the answers that biology provided about how the brain works, and more specifically, about the problem of consciousness.
According to neuroscientists, the way the brain works may be based on an organic substructure. And that makes it a subject matter of biology and neurobiology of the brain, the study of the way genes and morphogenesis work or new brain connections and structures are built.
07
06
Intuitively, the brain is seen as something unique and one-of-a-kind. But it is a scientific approach to understanding and studying it — with established rules — that we are talking about, not a common-sense view of it.
When we talk about genes and proteins, we refer to chemical processes and chemical compounds. They are macromolecules that consist of a large number of amino acids. But when neurons come together as a cognitive group, they start building an "entity" with fundamentally different properties.
03
The connections in such networks are not established by contacts between cells, but by the cells themselves, which are part of multiple events, memories, and emotions. Connections in this case are not "wires" as in a neural network. They are constituted by the cognitive elements themselves.
05
04
The structures of cell groups then become carriers for elements of psychological experience. This is a new structure — a network — with new properties, and it should no longer be studied either biologically or chemically.
08
But even if we call the brain, figuratively, a "biological" computer with cells-connections inside, the question remains about what "computational" laws are at work there? How can these laws actually be discovered? What if it’s not biology (cells, synapses, mediators, heterochemistry, etc.) that should be studied to discover them?
It may well be the manifestations of brain function that we should turn to. Perhaps we should continue (start?) exploring the higher manifestations of brain function. That requires more than just brain scans, CAT scans, etc. and more than just studying manifestations of brain function, such as language and speech. Perhaps deep inside, those manifestations also have "laws" like physics, biology, and chemistry do? Can they be different from those of biology or even math?
09
02
Currently, neuroscientists have two views of the brain:
It is an organ where physiological processes take place, and in this sense, it is not so different from kidneys, heart, and other organs.
It is a unique organ different from all the others. It is not physiological, but cognitive. On top of a neural network, it builds associations of elements capable of encoding the knowledge and experience of the whole body. It is a different brain structure, with different connections between groups of cells. Each group of these elements (cells) is no longer physiological, but rather cognitive, psychological.