ping pong ball Type post Author William A. Dembski Date February 9, 2024 CategoriesComputational SciencesScience Reporting Tagged , algorithms, artificial general intelligence, artificial intelligence, deception, deep fakes, deep learning, democracy, historical figures, hype, images, Neural Networks, post-trust, public opinion, robot, robotics, security, skepticism, trade-offs, trust, video Deep Fakes and Propaganda for Artificial General Intelligence William A. Dembski February 9, 2024 Computational Sciences, Science Reporting 6 The video shows a supposed table tennis match between a robot and a top human player. Yet the video is not of an actual match. Read More ›
handshake Type post Author Peter Biles Date March 11, 2023 CategoriesHuman ExceptionalismIntelligent DesignNeuroscience & Mind Tagged , artificial intelligence, ChatGPT, computers, copyright, critical thinking, DALL-E, Gary Smith, images, intelligence, novels, writing For AI, Human Hands Are Exceptional…For Now Peter Biles March 11, 2023 Human Exceptionalism, Intelligent Design, Neuroscience & Mind 5 In many artificially contrived images, the hands come up gnarled, disfigured, or otherwise anatomically incorrect. Read More ›
Mount-Rushmore Type post Author Jonathan Witt Date January 23, 2021 CategoriesIntelligent Design Tagged , algorithmic specified complexity, aliens, American history, bacterial flagellum, biological systems, Dallas Conference on Science and Faith, Discovery Institute Dallas, humanoids, humans, images, information, Mount Rushmore, Robert J. Marks II, William A. Dembski, Winston Ewert Algorithmic Specified Complexity: Measuring Mount Rushmore Jonathan Witt January 23, 2021 Intelligent Design 1 A non-humanoid gelatinous alien might assign no meaning to the faces on Mount Rushmore if the alien had never seen a humanoid. Read More ›
mirror 2 Type post Author Michael Egnor Date October 17, 2019 CategoriesFaith & Science Tagged , __edited, act, Aristotle, clouds, contingency, Five Ways, goodness, grass, images, light, mirror, nobility, ontology, Plato, potency, sky, Summa Contra Gentiles, Summa Theologica, Thomas Aquinas, trees, truth Aquinas’ Fourth Way: Light in a Mirror Michael Egnor October 17, 2019 Faith & Science 7 It’s helpful, as with his Third Way, to begin with a metaphor, in order to get an intuitive feel for the proof. Read More ›
Hogans (1) Type post Author Michael Egnor Date December 10, 2017 CategoriesMathematicsNeuroscience & MindPhilosophyScientific Reasoning Tagged , __k-review, abstraction, brain, Cartesian dualism, craniopagus twins, David Klinghoffer, Denyse O'Leary, images, knowledge, Krista Hogan, learning, materialism, memory, mind, perception, square root, Tatiana Hogan, thomas, Thomas Aquinas, Thomistic dualism, V.J. Torley The Craniopagus Twins and Thomistic Dualism Michael Egnor December 10, 2017 Mathematics, Neuroscience & Mind, Philosophy, Scientific Reasoning 15 Krista and Tatiana Hogan provide a remarkable opportunity to deepen our understanding of the human mind. Read More ›