'(·)@allgebrah·Aug 12, 2017Replying to @lovecryption and @0xa59a2dI'm not sure where I stand on this, but g seems to me to be the skill of generalizing, not raw processing power.1
'(·)@allgebrahReplying to @allgebrah and @0xa59a2dTasks like Chess have no built-in circuitry, so probably the brain reuses some wildly different circuitry and leans on g for that.9:40 PM · Aug 12, 2017·Twitter Web Client1 Like
'(·)@allgebrah·Aug 12, 2017Replying to @allgebrah and @0xa59a2dChess and other easily automated tasks are g-reliant, but the inverse doesn't necessarily hold - g-reliant doesn't mean "easily automated"?1
'(·)@allgebrah·Aug 12, 2017Replying to @allgebrah and @0xa59a2d"human social interactions are incredibly complex", yet tinder bots work125