Evolution proves that algorithms can solve any problem: Difference between revisions
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Here they might appeal to {{br|Darwin’s Dangerous Idea}}: it was [[evolution by natural selection]], after all, and ''only'' [[evolution by natural selection]] that as operated relentlessly, fpr 370 million years since the first legged fish when they crawled out of the primordial ooze and onto the shores of a new, terrestrial world. That single algorithm transformed those little flippy-finned mudsuckers into the highest type of sentient being yet known in this neighbourhood of the Galaxy: the [[ISDA ninja]]. ''So how can you say [[algorithm]]s can’t be intelligent?'' | Here they might appeal to {{br|Darwin’s Dangerous Idea}}: it was [[evolution by natural selection]], after all, and ''only'' [[evolution by natural selection]] that as operated relentlessly, fpr 370 million years since the first legged fish when they crawled out of the primordial ooze and onto the shores of a new, terrestrial world. That single algorithm transformed those little flippy-finned mudsuckers into the highest type of sentient being yet known in this neighbourhood of the Galaxy: the [[ISDA ninja]]. ''So how can you say [[algorithm]]s can’t be intelligent?'' | ||
{{sa}} | |||
*{{author|Daniel Dennett}}’s impressive, but over-blown, {{br|Darwin’s Dangerous Idea}} | |||
*[[Evolution]] | |||
*[[Why is reg tech so disappointing?]] |