Super-Bacterial Intelligence (SBI): the holy grail of artificial intelligence research! Can we achieve it in this century?
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Replying to @Meaningness
I'd guess that computationally, bacteria are already well within reach and the problem is the lack of even remotely good models.
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Replying to @gomijacogeo @Meaningness
By the end of the century, we can probably do a bacteria as an ab initio computational chemistry simulation.
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Replying to @gomijacogeo
Hard to predict that far ahead one way or the other, imo fwiw
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Replying to @Meaningness
This seems like an ok overview -http://jcs.biologists.org/content/129/2/257 …
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Replying to @gomijacogeo
Hmm. I worked in this area 20 years ago. At that time, it wasn’t capable of predicting biological properties of 10-atom systems
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Replying to @Meaningness @gomijacogeo
…which was because of inaccuracy in the underlying physical model, not computational limitations.
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Replying to @Meaningness @gomijacogeo
People ran simulations anyway, because they were desperate for any insight, and it could provide some qualitatively sometimes
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Replying to @Meaningness @gomijacogeo
That article does say the physical models are better, but I’m skeptical that they are good enough. I would want to see >
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Replying to @Meaningness @gomijacogeo
accurate predictions of 10-atom systems before believing they have done anything more than scale up a known-inadequate method.
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There may have been actual breakthroughs on that since I was in the field.
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