memory Type post Author Michael Egnor Date February 29, 2024 CategoriesMedicineNeuroscience & MindPhilosophy Tagged , brain damage, chess, computer, Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy, knowledge, Ludwig Wittgenstein, M. R. Bennett, memories, memory, metaphor, mind, neuroscience, P. M. S. Hacker, philosophers, Philosophical Foundations of Neuroscience, storage Memories Are Not “Stored” in the Brain; Here’s Why Michael Egnor February 29, 2024 Medicine, Neuroscience & Mind, Philosophy 5 It doesn’t make any sense to talk about the “storage” of non-physical entities. Philosophers like to call that a "category error." Read More ›
Vincent Van Gogh Type post Author Casey Luskin Date November 15, 2022 CategoriesArtsNeuroscience & MindScience Tagged , artists, Blake Lemoine, chatbot, computers, consciousness, COSM 2022, David Chalmers, Discovery Institute, feedback, Google, hard problem of consciousness, Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy, LaMDA, microchips Could Artificial Intelligence Ever Pass the Van Gogh Test? Casey Luskin November 15, 2022 Arts, Neuroscience & Mind, Science 5 Vincent Van Gogh was crazy but he was talented, and AI can be neither crazy nor talented. Read More ›