Algorithm: Difference between revisions
Amwelladmin (talk | contribs) No edit summary |
Amwelladmin (talk | contribs) No edit summary |
||
Line 5: | Line 5: | ||
Of particular interest in financial services: | Of particular interest in financial services: | ||
*[[High-frequency trading]] computers follow [[algorithm]]s faster and more reliably than a mortal trader could dream of; | *[[High-frequency trading]] computers follow [[algorithm]]s faster and more reliably than a mortal trader could dream of; | ||
*The | *The dogma of [[outsourcing]] is predicated on a [[playbook]]; a form of [[algorithm for the meatware]]. | ||
Also of great interest to [[evolution]]ary biologists, psychiatrists and philosophers: According to {{author|Daniel Dennett}}, the great (if unstated) insight of {{author|Charles Darwin}}’s {{br|The Origin of Species}} was that the evolutionary process was a mindless, algorithmic one, that could operate without intervention. This made him a household name ([[Daniel Dennett|Dennett]], not Darwin) when he published {{br|Darwin’s Dangerous Idea}}. | Also of great interest to [[evolution]]ary biologists, psychiatrists and philosophers: According to {{author|Daniel Dennett}}, the great (if unstated) insight of {{author|Charles Darwin}}’s {{br|The Origin of Species}} was that the evolutionary process was a mindless, algorithmic one, that could operate without intervention. This made him a household name ([[Daniel Dennett|Dennett]], not Darwin) when he published {{br|Darwin’s Dangerous Idea}}. | ||
Line 19: | Line 19: | ||
*[[Substance and form]] | *[[Substance and form]] | ||
*[[Algorithm vs. heuristic]] - machine versus human | *[[Algorithm vs. heuristic]] - machine versus human | ||
{{devil}} |
Revision as of 08:38, 3 August 2020
JC pontificates about technology
An occasional series.
|
An algorithm is a process or set of rules to be followed in calculations or other problem-solving operations, especially by a computer, or non-questioning drone in Bangalore. An algorithm’s success is predicated on all conundrums within its domain having been finally resolved, so it can operate without obstruction or intervention from a guiding intelligent hand.
Compare with a heuristic.
Of particular interest in financial services:
- High-frequency trading computers follow algorithms faster and more reliably than a mortal trader could dream of;
- The dogma of outsourcing is predicated on a playbook; a form of algorithm for the meatware.
Also of great interest to evolutionary biologists, psychiatrists and philosophers: According to Daniel Dennett, the great (if unstated) insight of Charles Darwin’s The Origin of Species was that the evolutionary process was a mindless, algorithmic one, that could operate without intervention. This made him a household name (Dennett, not Darwin) when he published Darwin’s Dangerous Idea.
Dennett described it as “universal acid”, and it certainly seems to have burned through a few synapses in the management consulting industry. That piece of magic: that the something of rice pudding and income tax that could come from the nothing of primordial sludge, without a beneficent creator, is the basis behind the current dogmas of artificial intelligence, and the belief that no intelligence, let alone subject matter expertise, is needed to effectively run a complex process such as (for totally random example) the onboarding of trading counterparties in an investment bank.