Jiang says human imaginative leaps would require enormous computational processing if translated into machine terms, which pressures a simple computer analogy for the brain.
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Processing power
A transcript-matched topic anchored by excerpts such as "...time and a lot of like entire worlds of computer that processing power in order to make the imaginary leaps that"
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A transcript-matched topic anchored by excerpts such as "...time and a lot of like entire worlds of computer that processing power in order to make the imaginary leaps that"
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"...time and a lot of like entire worlds of computer that processing power in order to make the imaginary leaps that"
"...this again, 1966, when they didn't have that much technology and processing power, it's all just very simple trick. Okay. And like, so let's..."
Relevant Lectures And Readings
Paradise first appears as receptivity rather than rank, then the lecture widens into vows, memory, resurrection, original sin, and Jiang's culminating wager that God created humanity because perfection alone cannot imagine.
The lecture starts by warning against overconfident certainty, then rewires from literary method to a hard model of AI: today’s systems are pattern-fitters optimized for compliance, so power becomes control over what counts as...
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