lightbulbs Type post Date May 2, 2025 CategoriesEvolutionIntelligent DesignNeuroscience & Mind Tagged , creativity, Eric Holloway, escalator, evolutionary processes, human creativity, large language models, Lovelace test, Minding the Brain, mountain climbing, naturalistic explanations, parallel universes, Pat Flynn, Planck cubes, Planck time, randomness, Richard Taylor, Robert J. Marks II, Selmer Bringsjord, Wyoming Can We Credit Human Creativity to Blind Evolution? Science and Culture May 2, 2025 Evolution, Intelligent Design, Neuroscience & Mind 4 The genius of the human mind requires an external, intelligent source beyond the material world. Read More ›
robot Type post Author Casey Luskin Date November 14, 2022 CategoriesNeuroscience & MindScience Tagged , Academy Award, Alan Turing, artificial intelligence, Baylor University, Blake Lemoine, chatbot, computer programmers, computer science, computers, consciousness, COSM, George Montañez, Grammys, Harvey Mudd College, humans, LaMDA, Lovelace test, pop culture, Robert J. Marks II, TikTok, Washington Post, worldview, Yahoo News! Experts Debate: Was a Chatbot Sentient? Casey Luskin November 14, 2022 Neuroscience & Mind, Science 8 Lemoine was famously fired from Google earlier this year after he leaked a transcript of his conversation with Google’s advanced LaMDA chatbot program. Read More ›
Parcheesi-board Type post Author Robert J. Marks II Date July 5, 2022 CategoriesIntelligent DesignNeuroscience & Mind Tagged , Ada Lovelace, artificial intelligence, bullies, chess, computer code, computer programs, creativity, games, Go (game), Lovelace test, Penn State, programmer, rules, software, swarms, Turing test For AI to Be Creative, Here’s What It Would Take Robert J. Marks II July 5, 2022 Intelligent Design, Neuroscience & Mind 7 AI can appear smart when it generates a surprising result. But surprise does not equate to creativity. Read More ›
Igor Stravinsky Type post Author David Klinghoffer Date January 23, 2018 CategoriesNeuroscience & Mind Tagged , __k-review, artificial intelligence, classical music, Elon Musk, Introduction to Evolutionary Informatics, Johann Sebastian Bach, Lovelace test, Ludwig Beethoven, podcast, Robert Crowther, Robert J. Marks II, robots, Sarah Chaffee, Stephen Hawking, Turing test Robert Marks on the Lovelace Test David Klinghoffer January 23, 2018 Neuroscience & Mind 2 Beyond lies the unique realm of the human, no matter what addled things Stephen Hawking may say about computers “replacing” us. Read More ›