Dan Fabulich wrote:
> 
> Steve Nichols wrote:
> 
> > Exactly ..... whereas evolvable circuitry machines (silicon or biological)
> > can be or approach infinite-state. The mammalian brain is infinite-state
> > in a way that a simple thermostat, or even a massive Turing machine,
> > cannot.
> 
> I had not heard the news that brains were infinite-state.  Last I
> heard, atoms were all finite-state, so a finite clump of atoms must
> necessarily be finite-state.
> 
> The brain has very very many possible states, but it is no more
> infinite state than a hundred billion thermostats would be
> infinite-state, if you wired them all together in an interesting way.
> 
>
That depends on what you mean by "state".  A general purpose computer
has a finite number of possible states if looked at at the bit or
physical component level.  But because it is reprogrammable (and even
self-programmable) its "states" in terms of possible contents
(semantics) are infinite.  Much like all the possible essays are
infinite even when expressed with a finite vocabulary.  
Also, as the human brain is smart enough to build extensions to its
hardware and native capabilities, it is even more arguably not
finite-state. 
- samantha
This archive was generated by hypermail 2b30 : Mon May 28 2001 - 09:50:37 MDT