AI's First Philosopher | Aeon

“He wants to extend his work on the machine still further towards the biological side. I can best describe it by saying that hitherto the machine has been planned for work equivalent to that of the lower parts of the brain, and he wants to see how much a machine can do for the higher ones; for example, could a machine be made that could learn by experience?”

Read the Article | Aeon | Sebastian Sunday Greve

A. M. Turing (1950) Computing Machinery and Intelligence. Mind 49: 433-460. Read here

Cyberbrain via Wikipedia Commons, the creator has released it explicitly under the license Creative Commons Zero

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Santiago Ramón y Cajal and Ants | Nautilus

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The Simple Usefulness of the Secchi Disc | Science History Institute