Human-computer super-intelligence

  • Antonov A
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Abstract

The concept of human intelligence includes several types of intellectual activity – rational thinking, emotional thinking, unconscious thinking, intuitive thinking, and automatic control of the biological systems. Rational thinking refers to the cognition of the phenomena and laws of the animate and the inanimate nature. It is realized through the processing of mostly visual images and is therefore limited to the low-factor (not more than three-factor) laws of nature. Here belong, for instance, the laws of physics cognized by the mankind. All other types of human thinking are multiple-factor. The concept of artificial intelligence refers to computer simulation of the human low-factor rational thinking. This is why artificial intelligence cannot serve as the basis for 'computer super-intelligence'. Contrary to computer super-intelligence, the 'human-computer super-intelligence' can solve these tasks. Human-computer super-intelligence will allow developing super-knowledge on significant multiple-factor processes – medical-biological, scientific and technical, financial and economic, organizational, etc.

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APA

Antonov, A. (2010). Human-computer super-intelligence. American Journal of Scientific and Industrial Research, 1(2), 96–104. https://doi.org/10.5251/ajsir.2010.1.2.96.104

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