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ive development of humans and human-like AGI systems, but in Table 11.1 we present them in a slightly more general context, using two examples: the Piagetan example of the human (or humanlike) mind as it develops from infancy to maturity; and also the example of the "origin of life" and the development
refining inference control. EFTA00623977 202 11 Stages of Cognitive Development A problem commonly used to illustrate the difference between the Piagetan concrete opera- tional and formal stages is that of figuring out the rules for making pendulums swing quickly versus slowly pins'. If you ask a chil
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vironment, without requiring anywhere near a complete simulation of realistic physics. EFTA00624075 300 16 AC1 Preschool Fig. 16.1: Part 1 of a Piagetan conservation of volume experiment: a child observes that two glasses obviously have the same amount of milk in them, and then sees the content of on
, etc. And, as typical, not necessarily representative examples of tasks psychologists use to mea- sure cognitive development (drawn mainly from the Piagetan tradition, without implying any assertion that this is the only tradition worth pursuing), consider the following: 1. Which row has more circles- A
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itive development of humans and human-like AGI systems, but in Table 11.1 we present them in a slightly more general context, using two examples: the Piagetan example of the human (or humanlike) mind as it develops from infancy to maturity; and also the example of the “origin of life’ and the development of
inference control. HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_013117 202 11 Stages of Cognitive Development A problem commonly used to illustrate the difference between the Piagetan concrete opera- tional and formal stages is that of figuring out the rules for making pendulums swing quickly versus slowly [P58]. If you ask a child
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, etc. And, as typical, not necessarily representative examples of tasks psychologists use to mea- sure cognitive development (drawn mainly from the Piagetan tradition, without implying any assertion that this is the only tradition worth pursuing), consider the following: 1. Which row has more circles- A
nt, without requiring anywhere near a complete simulation of realistic physics. HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_013215 300 16 AGI Preschool Fig. 16.1: Part 1 of a Piagetan conservation of volume experiment: a child observes that two glasses obviously have the same amount of milk in them, and then sees the content of one
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led "cognitive complete- ness" is necessary and sufficient for efficient general intelligence at the level of an inteligent adult human (e.g. at the Piagetan formal level IP ia531). Of course, the above considerations are very, far from a rigorous mathematical proof (or even precise formulation) of this
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lled “cognitive complete- ness” is necessary and sufficient for efficient general intelligence at the level of an inteligent adult human (e.g. at the Piagetan formal level [Pia53]). Of course, the above considerations are very far from a rigorous mathematical proof (or even precise formulation) of this hyp
CogPrime
OrganizationOrganization referenced in documents
OpenCog
OrganizationArtificial intelligence research project

George W. Bush
PersonPresident of the United States from 2001 to 2009
ConceptNodes
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Marc Rich
PersonAmerican commodities trader (1934–2013)
Hopfield
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Jean Piaget
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Vygotsky
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VariableAtoms
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Stephen Hawking
PersonBritish theoretical physicist, cosmologist and author (1942–2018)
Matthew Ikle
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Courtney Wild
PersonAmerican victim/survivor of Jeffrey Epstein who led legal battle for victims' rights

Joel Pitt
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Dorner
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the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance
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Woody Allen
PersonAmerican filmmaker, actor and comedian (born 1935)

Kohlberg
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Python
OrganizationGeneral-purpose programming language

Donald Hebb
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Stephan Vladimir Bugaj
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