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The Lighter Side
The Lighter Side
1 y

This 8-Year-Old In A Childrens Hospital Loves Pickles, So A Chef Taught Her To Make Them
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This 8-Year-Old In A Childrens Hospital Loves Pickles, So A Chef Taught Her To Make Them

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Hot Air Feed
Hot Air Feed
1 y

Lights Out In -- And For -- Gaza?
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Lights Out In -- And For -- Gaza?

Lights Out In -- And For -- Gaza?
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Strange & Paranormal Files
Strange & Paranormal Files
1 y

Do Our Thoughts Truly Exist? Philosophers Weigh In
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anomalien.com

Do Our Thoughts Truly Exist? Philosophers Weigh In

Sam Baron: You can doubt just about anything. But there’s one thing you can know for sure: you are having thoughts right now. This idea came to characterise the philosophical thinking of 17th century philosopher Rene Descartes. For Descartes, that we have thoughts may be the only thing we can be certain about. But what exactly are thoughts? This is a mystery that has long troubled philosophers such as Descartes – and which has been given new life by the rise of artificial intelligence, as experts try to figure out whether machines can genuinely think. Two schools of thought There are two main answers to the philosophical question of what thoughts are. The first is that thoughts might be material things. Thoughts are just like atoms, particles, cats, clouds and raindrops: part and parcel of the physical universe. This position is known as physicalism or materialism. The second view is that thoughts might stand apart from the physical world. They are not like atoms, but are an entirely distinct type of thing This view is called dualism, because it takes the world to have a dual nature: mental and physical. To better understand the difference between these views, consider a thought experiment. Suppose God is building the world from scratch. If physicalism is true, then all God needs to do to produce thoughts is build the basic physical components of reality – the fundamental particles – and put in place the laws of nature. Thoughts should follow. However, if dualism is true, then putting in place the basic laws and physical components of reality will not produce thoughts. Some non-physical aspects of reality will need to be added, as thoughts are something over and above all physical components. Why be a materialist? If thoughts are physical, what physical things are they? One plausible answer is they are brain states. This answer underpins much of contemporary neuroscience and psychology. Indeed, it is the apparent link between brains and thoughts that makes materialism seem plausible. There are many correlations between our brain states and our thoughts. Certain parts of the brain predictably “light up” when someone is in pain, or if they think about the past or future. The hippocampus, located near the brain stem, appears to be linked to imaginative and creative thought, while the Broca’s area in the left hemisphere appears to be linked to speech and language. What explains these correlations? One answer is that our thoughts just are varying states of the brain This answer, if correct, speaks in favour of materialism. Why be a dualist? That said, the correlations between brain states and thoughts are just that: correlations. We don’t have an explanation of how brain states – or any physical states for that matter – give rise to conscious thought. There is a well-known correlation between striking a match and the match lighting. But in addition to the correlation, we also have an explanation for why the match is lit when struck. The friction causes a chemical reaction in the match head, which leads to a release of energy. We have no comparable explanation for a link between thoughts and brain states. After all, there seem to be many physical things that don’t have thoughts. We have no idea why brain states give rise to thoughts and chairs don’t. The colour scientist The thing we are most certain about – that we have thoughts – is still completely unexplained in physical terms. That’s not for a lack of effort. Neuroscience, philosophy, cognitive science and psychology have all been hard at work trying to crack this mystery. But it gets worse: we may never be able to explain how thoughts arise from neural states. To understand why, consider this famous thought experiment by Australian philosopher Frank Jackson. Mary lives her entire life in a black-and-white room. She has never experienced colour. However, she also has access to a computer which contains a complete account of every physical aspect of the universe, including all the physical and neurological details of experiencing colour. She learns all of this. One day, Mary leaves the room and experiences colour for the first time. Does she learn anything new? It is very tempting to think she does: she learns what it’s like to experience colour. But remember, Mary already knew every physical fact about the universe. So if she learns something new, it must be some non-physical fact. Moreover, the fact she learns comes through experience, which means there must be some non-physical aspect to experience. If you think Mary learns something new by leaving the room, you must accept dualism to be true in some form. And if that’s the case, then we can’t provide an explanation of thought in terms of the brain’s functions, or so philosophers have argued. Minds and machines Settling the question of what thoughts are won’t completely settle the question of whether machines can think, but it would help. If thoughts are physical, then there’s no reason, in principle, why machines couldn’t think. If thoughts are not physical, however, it’s less clear whether machines could think. Would it be possible to get them “hooked up” to the non-physical in the right way? This would depend on how non-physical thoughts relate to the physical world. Either way, pursuing the question of what thoughts are will likely have significant implications for how we think about machine intelligence, and our place in nature. Sam Baron, Associate Professor, Philosophy of Science, The University of Melbourne This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article. The post Do Our Thoughts Truly Exist? Philosophers Weigh In appeared first on Anomalien.com.
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The Blaze Media Feed
The Blaze Media Feed
1 y

Purdue player accuses Illinois fans of hurling 'racist comments' at his family during game
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Purdue player accuses Illinois fans of hurling 'racist comments' at his family during game

Trey Kaufman-Renn, the star forward on the Purdue University men's basketball team, claimed that some fans of the University of Illinois hurled "racist comments" and other profanity at members of his family during the game Friday night.Kaufman-Renn made the allegations following the Illini's 88-80 home victory over the Boilermakers. He said the comments were so severe, he would be willing to "fight" over them."I was informed after the game, by my mom and my girlfriend, that there were some racist comments being made toward my brother, as well as my family being cussed out, stuff like that," he said.Kaufman-Renn, who scored 29 points in the loss, further indicated that the comments came from members of the Orange Krush, the Illinois student section. Kaufman-Renn's family was seated directly behind Purdue's bench in a section surrounded by the Orange Krush."In no way is that saying anything about all of Illinois' fans, but unfortunately the students that participated in that," Kaufman-Renn continued. "I just hope the security, especially at Illinois, can be better."'We have been in touch with Purdue to apologize and express our disappointment.'Purdue initially declined to comment on Kaufman-Renn's allegations. However, a spokesman for Purdue later said the team does not plan to file a formal complaint with the Big Ten Conference.Nevertheless, the University of Illinois has already issued an apology, even though the alleged comments still remain under investigation."Late in tonight’s game, Illinois staff was made aware of allegations of inappropriate comments made by members of the Orange Krush toward Purdue players, coaches, and fans," a spokesperson said in a statement. "We received additional details after the game’s conclusion. We take such allegations seriously, and we will continue gathering information to determine appropriate action. In the meantime, we have been in touch with Purdue to apologize and express our disappointment."Both the Illini and Boilermakers enjoy a first-round bye in the Big Ten Tournament, which starts Wednesday. They are also basically locks for the NCAA tournament later this month. CBS Sports currently projects that Purdue — which notched big wins over Alabama, Maryland, and Michigan — will be a 4-seed. Illinois is projected to be a 7-seed.Like Blaze News? Bypass the censors, sign up for our newsletters, and get stories like this direct to your inbox. Sign up here!
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Twitchy Feed
Twitchy Feed
1 y

Because OF COURSE! Randi Weingarten Admits the REAL Reason She Doesn't Want Dept. of Ed Abolished (Watch)
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twitchy.com

Because OF COURSE! Randi Weingarten Admits the REAL Reason She Doesn't Want Dept. of Ed Abolished (Watch)

Because OF COURSE! Randi Weingarten Admits the REAL Reason She Doesn't Want Dept. of Ed Abolished (Watch)
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Twitchy Feed
Twitchy Feed
1 y

Mollie Hemingway Spills ALL the Tea on Democrat Senator Who Ditched His Wife for Leftist Propaganda Queen
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twitchy.com

Mollie Hemingway Spills ALL the Tea on Democrat Senator Who Ditched His Wife for Leftist Propaganda Queen

Mollie Hemingway Spills ALL the Tea on Democrat Senator Who Ditched His Wife for Leftist Propaganda Queen
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RedState Feed
RedState Feed
1 y

Monday Morning Minute: The Many Faces of JD Vance
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redstate.com

Monday Morning Minute: The Many Faces of JD Vance

Monday Morning Minute: The Many Faces of JD Vance
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Trending Tech
Trending Tech
1 y

Chinese AI ‘Manus’ went viral like DeepSeek, but can it compete with ChatGPT’s AI agents?
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bgr.com

Chinese AI ‘Manus’ went viral like DeepSeek, but can it compete with ChatGPT’s AI agents?

DeepSeek went viral a few weeks ago, shocking the US tech world and tanking the stock market in the process. The Chinese AI firm surprised everyone with an AI reasoning chatbot as good as ChatGPT o1, but which was trained for a fraction of the cost. Since then, we've learned that hardware will still play a key role in developing advanced (frontier) AI like ChatGPT, but that software optimizations can also help. Also, we learned DeepSeek might have copied ChatGPT outputs as a shortcut to speed up training. DeepSeek going viral also made the world aware that Chinese AI firms shouldn't be ruled out despite their inability to purchase the latest chips from Nvidia and other US chip makers. Since the DeepSeek release, we've already seen a few impressive text-to-video AI models out of China that aim to compete with Sora. Some might even outperform OpenAI's model. The latest viral AI out of China is called Manus, from a company called The Butterfly Effect. Manus isn't your regular ChatGPT or DeepSeek rival. It's supposed to be an AI agent that can code on your behalf or browse the web for you. We already have such agents from Anthropic and OpenAI. OpenAI released two AI agents already, Operator and Deep Research. But only the latter is widely available to premium ChatGPT users. You still need to be a ChatGPT Pro user to access Operator, while Deep Research is available on the Plus plan. Back to Magnus; I saw news of it making the rounds on social media over the weekend. Apparently, the AI does well in tests, and people are in a hurry to use it. Invites are running low, and they might be selling for thousands of dollars online. That's according to TechCrunch, which tested the AI. However, the Magnus hype seems to be unwarranted. Magnus is still in beta and failed miserably at most of the tasks it was given. Continue reading... The post Chinese AI ‘Manus’ went viral like DeepSeek, but can it compete with ChatGPT’s AI agents? appeared first on BGR. Today's Top Deals Today’s deals: $117 AirPods 4, $10 off household cleaners, $190 ASUS Chromebook, 20% off Pi8 earbuds, more Best Fire TV Stick deals for March 2025 Today’s deals: $169 Apple AirPods Pro 2, $100 Philips Sonicare, $113 Bose speaker, $36 space heater, more Today’s deals: $279 iPad 10, Duracell battery sale, $19 SanDisk 256GB microSDXC, $110 XL air fryer, more
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Trending Tech
Trending Tech
1 y

M3 iPad Air reviews: Same old iPad, better Magic Keyboard
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bgr.com

M3 iPad Air reviews: Same old iPad, better Magic Keyboard

Last week, Apple unveiled the new M3 iPad Air. With the same chassis as the M2, iPad Air introduced less than a year ago, this new tablet features two main differences: the M3 processor and a revamped Magic Keyboard. Here's what reviewers have been saying about the M3 iPad Air ahead of its release on March 12. In its review, Wired praises the new M3 chip of the iPad Air, which might be great to lure "more creatives." However, the publication didn't feel much difference between the past two iPad Air tablets: For starters, it goes hand in hand with the M3 chip's graphics architecture. This iPad will attract a lot more creatives who are in the market for a powerful tablet (and a large screen). To fully leverage the processor, it's intended to be used with apps like Adobe Photoshop or Final Cut Pro. (...) As great as this sound, you probably won't notice much of a difference compared to last year's model in terms of basic usage. As far as stats go, Apple claims CPU performance is up to 35 percent faster than the iPad Air with M1. (...) I still have both the M1 and M2 versions and honestly, it was tough to spot a distinction in performance between all three. The M3 felt a bit snappier than the M1, but you'll likely only see a noticeable change if you're coming from an older A-series chip. The Verge's review talks about the difference in size. Since last year, Apple has offered the iPad Air in two versions, and the publication says the experience is very different between an 11-inch and a 13-inch model. It might seem silly to say that a 13-inch iPad is very different from an 11-inch iPad, but those two inches of screen size really do change everything. When I use a 13-inch iPad, which is mostly what I’ve been testing recently, I hardly ever pick it up; it’s a desk-bound, keyboard-attached thing. An 11-inch model, on the other hand, is so much easier to hold in two hands (or even in one) that I find myself carrying it around a lot more. Engadget praises the new Magic Keyboard, which is more similar to the one available with the M4 iPad Pro. In addition, it's cheaper: Apple also fixed one of my two major complaints about the last iPad Air. It has a new Magic Keyboard modeled after the much-improved one that was introduced alongside the iPad Pro M4. It’s thinner and lighter than the old iPad Air keyboard, has a row of useful function keys and the trackpad is a bit bigger. These aren’t major changes, but they are enough to make me much happier with the keyboard experience this year. It doesn’t have a few niceties you’ll find on the iPad Pro Magic Keyboard, though: The top case is smooth plastic rather than aluminum, the keys aren’t backlit and the trackpad has a physical click rather than haptic feedback. However, this keyboard is also $30 cheaper than the one it replace CNET believes Apple shouldn't call this tablet "iPad Air" as it continues not to be lighter or thinner than the iPad Pro. Still, it might be the perfect tablet for most people: Apple removed the "iPad Air" from the back of this iPad Air. There's just an Apple logo now. Maybe it's a sign. Air doesn't mean anything right now in Apple's iPad universe. The Air is very good, and at the right config, this could very well be the futureproofed, more affordable iPad that's perfect for you -- especially if you're interested in pushing the iPad hard for tools that will need the M3 performance. Don't overspend, and you'll be happy. You can also read M3 iPad Air reviews by Tom's Guide and TechRadar. M3 iPad Air reviews, hands-on, and unboxing in video Some YouTubers also released their M3 iPad Air reviews, hands-on, and unboxing videos. These are some options for you to check out: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=erUQVckt0bI&pp=ygULaVBhZCBBaXIgTTM%3D https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=E34cnd1jUYo&pp=ygULaVBhZCBBaXIgTTM%3D https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rVDN9zUjhxM&pp=ygULaVBhZCBBaXIgTTM%3D https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=w-7Efbasp54&pp=ygULaVBhZCBBaXIgTTM%3D https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GI1w-NYpsik&pp=ugMJCgVlbi1VUxABugUHEgVlbi1VU8oFC2lQYWQgQWlyIE0z2AcB https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jAYSJ01Z8Kk&pp=ygULaVBhZCBBaXIgTTM%3D Don't Miss: Apple announces M3 iPad Air with new Magic Keyboard The post M3 iPad Air reviews: Same old iPad, better Magic Keyboard appeared first on BGR. Today's Top Deals Best Fire TV Stick deals for March 2025 Best deals: Tech, laptops, TVs, and more sales Today’s deals: $279 iPad 10, Duracell battery sale, $19 SanDisk 256GB microSDXC, $110 XL air fryer, more Today’s deals: $164 iPhone SE, $799 M2 MacBook Air, $300 off Peloton Bike, $28 Anker waterproof speaker, more
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NEWSMAX Feed
NEWSMAX Feed
1 y

'Say Thank You,' Rubio Tells Poland Amid Starlink Spat
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'Say Thank You,' Rubio Tells Poland Amid Starlink Spat

Secretary of State Marco Rubio accused Poland's foreign minister Radoslaw Sikorski of "making things up" and suggested on Sunday he was ungrateful, in a strong rebuke after Sikorski said Ukraine may need an alternative to the Starlink satellite service.
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