Hi Peter,

Bottom line: cognitive science is ultimately a branch of neuroscience that
deals with the mind/behaviour without dealing with the science (biophysics)
of consciousness. Decades ago it adopted a policy: 'computers as a metaphor
for brains'. It then used computers very effectively in the context all
down the decades. The use of computers in this way does not mean computer
science is neuroscience or cognitive science, nor does that usage prove
that 'the brain is a computer'.

In the ARGH!!! thread I have just decoupled computer science and
neuroscience properly. It is a major review and consolidation of the
relative science contributions that formally specifies the relationship
between the conduct of computer science, neuroscience, cognitive science,
the science of 'artificial general intelligence and the science of
consciousness, All these are located in a framework that applies across all
the sciences and related engineering.

I can put it together in a single document if you're interested.

The upcoming sections of the text I am posting to the thread includes the
practical conduct of the route to AGI that does not use computers. It has a
form of human-mediated 'evolutionary' development. Custom hardware chips
are manually developed and then configured by embedding them in an
environment and stimulating them. You choose the number of hardware cells
and then you explore the range of final stable functions that can be
achieved under what conditions. You start with 'single cell' organisms and
build up from there.

It's not evolutionary development by genetic algorithms because there are
no actual algorithms (no software at all). It is evolutionary because the
results, as we manually build bigger and bigger chips, increasing the
number of cells is, in effect creates the new scope of adaptive behaviours
of a robot that is effectively higher on an evolutionary ladder of general
intelligence.

I remember those early days! It was when I first came to understand what it
takes to create artificial general intelligence that does not use
computers. I was ignored then, and it continues to this day. It's taken all
this time, including an epic PhD on the biophysics, to work out why science
hasn't done AGI yet and why it always ends up doing what's in your diagram.
Now science can do it and I have designed the basis of the hardware. But
it's too late for me to do it. If you want to find out ... please read and
comment on the remaining postings to the thread as I do them. I'd
appreciate the input.

cheers, good to hear from you.
colin

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