swimmer Type post Author Neil Thomas Date January 19, 2023 CategoriesAnatomyBiologyIntelligent DesignMedicineScience Tagged , abiogenesis, argument from incredulity, automation, autonomic nervous system, Charles Darwin, Charles Lyell, circulation, David Hume, Erasmus Darwin, evolution, Evolution: A Theory in Crisis, heart, Howard Glicksman, innovation, intelligent design, Lucretius, Michael Denton, natural selection, Neo-Darwinism, Paul Davies, physiology, prosthetics, Steve Laufmann On the Miracles of Physiological Design Neil Thomas January 19, 2023 Anatomy, Biology, Intelligent Design, Medicine, Science 12 The book under review is a splendid and uniquely well-informed contribution to the debate about what is by all indices a theory in possibly terminal crisis. Read More ›
self-driving car Type post Author William A. Dembski Date April 20, 2021 CategoriesNeuroscience & MindPhilosophy Tagged , artificial intelligence, automation, Big Tech, computer science, deep learning, Erik Larson, Eugene Goostman, eye contact, Google, gorillas, machine learning, self-driving cars, Tay, The Myth of Artificial Intelligence, traffic Automated Driving and Other Failures of AI William A. Dembski April 20, 2021 Neuroscience & Mind, Philosophy 3 It would be interesting to see what fully automated driving would look like in a place like Moldova. Read More ›
Robert-Marks Type post Date September 13, 2019 CategoriesNeuroscience & Mind Tagged , __edited, artificial intelligence, automation, Baylor University, Beatris Rusu, chess, computer programming, consciousness, creativity, deep learning, Go (game), ID the Future, podcast, programmer, Robert J. Marks II, Summer Seminars Computer Engineer Robert J. Marks Discusses the Perils and Promise of AI Science and Culture September 13, 2019 Neuroscience & Mind 2 Marks concedes that a computer code can surprise us — as, for example, when playing the game Go. Read More ›
cute-baby-boy-with-laptop-on-bed-stockpack-adobe-stock-135758804-stockpack-adobestock Type post Author Brendan Dixon Date January 17, 2017 CategoriesComputational SciencesTechnology Tagged , __nedited, artificial intelligence, automation, child-rearing, deep learning, education, information, media is the message, Neil Postman, Neural Networks, neutrality, privacy Turn Over Child-Raising to a Computer? Brendan Dixon January 17, 2017 Computational Sciences, Technology 5 Mattel's new "smart baby monitor," their digital nanny dubbed Aristotle, leaves me flummoxed. Read More ›
red-dart-arrow-hitting-in-the-target-center-of-dartboard-bus-118832817-stockpack-adobestock Type post Author Brendan Dixon Date October 16, 2016 CategoriesComputational SciencesHuman ExceptionalismTechnology Tagged , __nedited, ai ethics, artificial intelligence, assisted intelligence, automation, Elon Musk, human uniqueness, intelligence, Ray Kurzweil, Research, robotics Artificial Intelligence: Good Aim, Wrong Target Brendan Dixon October 16, 2016 Computational Sciences, Human Exceptionalism, Technology 4 Let's shoot for "Assisted Intelligence" instead. Read More ›