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vili details of the previous chapters, but (we believe) not so sensitively as to be incomprehensible without them. This is admittedly an unusual sort of book, mixing demonstrated conclusions with unproved conjectures in a complex way, all oriented toward an extraordinarily ambitious goal. Further, the chapters are somewhat variant in their levels of detail — some very nitty-gritty, some more high level, with much of the variation due to how much concrete work has been done on the topic of the chapter at time of writing. However, it is important to understand that the ideas presented here are not mere armchair speculation — they are currently being used as the basis for an open-source software project called OpenCog, which is being worked on by software developers around the world. Right now OpenCog embodies only a percentage of the overall CogPrime design as described here. But if OpenCog continues to attract sufficient funding or volunteer interest, then the ideas presented in these volumes will be validated or refuted via practice. (As a related note: here and there in this book, we will refer to the "current" CogPrime implementation (in the OpenCog framework); in all cases this refers to OpenCog as of late 2013.) To state one believes one knows a workable path to creating a human-level (and potentially greater) general intelligence is to make a dramatic statement, given the conventional way of thinking about the topic in the contemporary scientific community. However, we feel that once a little more time has passed, the topic will lose its drama (if not its interest and importance), and it will be widely accepted that there are many ways to create intelligent machines — some simpler and some more complicated; some more brain-like or human-like and some less so; some more efficient and some more wasteful of resources; etc. We have little doubt that, from the perspective of AGI science 50 or 100 years hence (and probably even 10-20 years hence), the specific designs presented here will seem awkward, messy, inefficient and circuitous in various respects. But that is how science and engineering progress. Given the current state of knowledge and understanding, having any concrete, comprehensive design and plan for creating AGI is a significant step forward; and it is in this spirit that we present here our thinking about the CogPrime architecture and the nature of general intelligence. In the words of Sir Edmund Hillary, the first to scale Everest: “Nothing Venture, Nothing Win.” Prehistory of the Book The writing of this book began in earnest in 2001, at which point it was informally referred to as “The Novamente Book.” The original “Novamente Book” manuscript ultimately got too big for its own britches, and subdivided into a number of different works — The Hidden Pattern [Goe06a], a philosophy of mind book published in 2006; Probabilistic Logic Networks [GIGHO08], a more technical work published in 2008; Real World Reasoning [GGC" 11], a sequel to Proba- bilistic Logic Networks published in 2011; and the two parts of this book. The ideas described in this book have been the collaborative creation of multiple overlapping communities of people over a long period of time. The vast bulk of the writing here was done by Ben Goertzel; but Cassio Pennachin and Nil Geisweiller made sufficient writing, thinking and editing contributions over the years to more than merit their inclusion of co-authors. Further, many of the chapters here have co-authors beyond the three main co-authors of the book; and HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_012904

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Filename HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_012904.jpg
File Size 0.0 KB
OCR Confidence 85.0%
Has Readable Text Yes
Text Length 3,586 characters
Indexed 2026-02-04T16:17:48.568353