8
Total Mentions
8
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705
Connected Entities
Organization referenced in documents
EFTA00211718
nty is the power to create and enforce a criminal code.") (citin Alfred L. Snapp & Son, Inc. I. Puerto Rico ex rel. Barez, 458 U.S. 592, 601 (1982); McCulloch . Maryland, 4 Wheat. 316, 418, 4 L. Ed. 579 (1819)). 15 EFTA00211732 the DOJ that there was no basis for a federal prosecution of Epstein and th
EFTA00479127
ver the sessions and decided who to invite and what they should talk about. von Foerster, as Secretary, was the driving force of the project. It was McCulloch who insisted over Norbert Wiener's objections that "mind" be introduced into the mix, and for this, he recruited Gregory Bateson and Margaret Mead.
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distracted the public from the excellent work being done everyday," Bove wrote. The Washington Post (02/05, Roebuck, Stein), NBC News (02/05, Doshi, McCulloch), the Hill (02/05, Samuels), Politico (02/05, Gerstein, Orden), UPI (02/05, Hughes), Newsweek (02/05, Whisnant), Washington Examiner (02/05, Oliver
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g whether a statute applies exiraterritorially, we also presume that Congress does not intend to violate winciples of international law.") (citing McCulloch Sociedad National de Marineros de Honduras, 372 U.S. 10, 21-22, 83 S.Ct. 67i 9 L.Ed.2d 547 (1963)); see also United States Neil, 312 F.3d 419, 421
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t its consequences are intimately bound up in the idea of an impending technological singularity. His work on neuroscience and his initial support of McCulloch and Pitts adumbrated the startlingly effective deep-learning methods of the present day. Over the past decade, and particularly in the last five year
HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_016804_sub_002 - HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_016995
It’s fun to show it an abstract painting and see what it says. But it does a pretty good job. It works using the same neural-network technology that McCulloch and Pitts imagined in 1943 and lots of us worked on in the early eighties. Back in the 1980s, people successfully did OCR—optical character recogniti
HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_016221_sub_001 - HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_016320
t its consequences are intimately bound up in the idea of an impending technological singularity. His work on neuroscience and his initial support of McCulloch and Pitts adumbrated the startlingly effective deep-learning methods of the present day. Over the past decade, and particularly in the last five year
HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_016221_sub_002 - HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_016412
It’s fun to show it an abstract painting and see what it says. But it does a pretty good job. It works using the same neural-network technology that McCulloch and Pitts imagined in 1943 and lots of us worked on in the early eighties. Back in the 1980s, people successfully did OCR—optical character recogniti

George W. Bush
PersonPresident of the United States from 2001 to 2009

Harvey Weinstein
PersonAmerican film producer and sex offender (born 1952)

Oliver Stone
PersonAmerican film director, screenwriter, and producer (born 1946)

Wilbur Ross
PersonUnited States 39th Secretary of Commerce

Samantha Power
PersonIrish-American academic, author and diplomat

Marc Rich
PersonAmerican commodities trader (1934–2013)

Daniel Kahneman
PersonIsraeli-American psychologist and economist (1934–2024)

John Brockman
PersonAmerican literary agent

George M. Church
PersonGeneticist, molecular engineer, chemist

Stuart Russell
PersonBritish computer scientist (1962-)

Eric Trump
PersonAmerican businessman and reality television personality (born 1984)

Frank Wilczek
PersonAmerican theoretical physicist

Jaan Tallinn
PersonEstonian investor and programmer (born 1972)

Venki Ramakrishnan
PersonNobel prize winning American and British structural biologist
Warren McCulloch
PersonPerson referenced in documents

Stephen Hawking
PersonBritish theoretical physicist, cosmologist and author (1942–2018)

Martha Stewart
PersonAmerican businesswoman, writer, TV personality (born 1941)

Julie K. Brown
PersonAmerican journalist

David Kaiser
PersonAmerican physicist
Bateson
PersonSurname reference in documents