Smokingpipesitter Type post Author George Montañez Date February 25, 2026 CategoriesComputational SciencesHuman Exceptionalism Tagged , animals, arithmetic, artificial inteligence, attention, bigram model, Claude, Claude Shannon, coherence, comprehension, computer code, conversations, Data Processing Inequality, disinformation, embedding, English, fish, food, functional capability, games, generative AI systems, GPT-5, humans, incompleteness theorem, information theory, Kurt Gödel, large language models, mathematical reasoning, model collapse, music, numbers, pixels, poetry, processing, prompts, reasoning, René Magritte, semantics, statistical patterns, syntax, The Treachery of Images, tokens, vectors, video, William Shakespeare, word approximation, words Why AI Can’t Replace Us Functionally George Montañez February 25, 2026 Computational Sciences, Human Exceptionalism 9 The map is not the territory. The symbol is not the thing. And the model is not the mind. Read More ›
brain Type post Author Andrew McDiarmid Date June 4, 2025 CategoriesFaith & ScienceMedicineNeuroscience & Mind Tagged , abstract thought, artificial intelligence, brain, computational processing, conjoined twins, Denyse O'Leary, disintegration, dualism, free will, gullibility, ID the Future, intentionality, materialism, meaning, Michael Egnor, near-death experiences, neuroscience, podcast, Research, soul, split-brain surgery, syntax, The Immortal Mind A Neurosurgeon Pulls Back the Curtain on the Soul Andrew McDiarmid June 4, 2025 Faith & Science, Medicine, Neuroscience & Mind 3 Dr. Michael Egnor tackles provocative ideas, making a case that the human soul exists and that the mind is immortal. Read More ›
brilliant-young-mathematician-is-writing-on-big-blackboard-a-206675232-stockpack-adobestock Type post Author Casey Luskin Date July 11, 2006 CategoriesEvolutionMathematics Tagged , __edited, algorithms, complexity, credentialism, evolutionary informatics, language, Scientific Dissent from Darwin, semantic information, specialization, syntax, Wistar Symposium Mathematicians and Evolution Casey Luskin July 11, 2006 Evolution, Mathematics 5 Mathematics has a strong tradition of giving cogent critique of evolutionary biology. Read More ›