Correct. It’s relatively simple, but we have a lot of neurons, cortical layers, cortical microcolums, cortical columns, regions and our hemispheres. It depends on what you call it: massively parallel competitive selection, adversarial selection, natural selection or something else. But it uses competition for coherence in time at the nerve (just a long neural axon), the brain’s neuron, using sequence, facet, object, position, place, space, location, valence, culminating in an episode, and the same for coherence among parallel predictions over time (autoassociative memory via episodes as indexes). Since episodes contain valences (values) then it’s just a massive survival test along the hierarchy and breadth of excited associations. It’s another example of how nature uses many simple things in parallel to produce complexity.
Reply addressees: @Jabblewox @RichardDawkins
Source date (UTC): 2024-07-14 17:20:09 UTC
Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1812537583617937409
Replying to: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1812535033988575356



