When we experience our own reasoning, we don't actually perceive what our mind is doing, but the mind's rather crude model of what it is doing. This may have led quite a few philosophers and early AI researchers on the wrong track.
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Replying to @Plinz
I'm thinking how this would fall under an evolutionary framework of the mind developing to survive and basing it's processes and perceptions on that
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Replying to @NeuroMaliki @ali_talib
Most people don't even know by which features they recognize faces, or around what angle they rotate the steering column of their bicycle. Our models tend to be collections of black boxes that are labeled with things that are wildly different from what's inside.
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Replying to @Plinz @ali_talib
isnt there a quality leap between riding a bicycle and reasoning
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Replying to @makc3d @ali_talib
Yes, that’s why it is much easier for a nervous system to figure out how it cycles than how it reasons.
10:13 PM - 8 Jan 2018
from Neighborhood 9, Cambridge
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