| Connected Entity | Relationship Type |
Strength
(mentions)
|
Documents | Actions |
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
person
Bertrand Russell
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Co authors |
8
Strong
|
4 | |
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person
John Kerry
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Professional |
5
|
1 |
| Date | Event Type | Description | Location | Actions |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1890-01-01 | N/A | Whitehead and Russell began writing Principia Mathematica | Cambridge | View |
This document is a printout of a web archive from the Albuquerque Tribune, dated March 7, 2006 (referencing a December 2002 article). It lists 18 donors—a mix of individuals and corporations—who each contributed $5,000 to an unspecified recipient (likely a political campaign or fund given the context of DOJ records). The list includes prominent figures such as John C. Whitehead, John J. Moores, and Jane Rosenthal, alongside New Mexico-based businesses.
This document is a printout from the 'Albuquerque Tribune Online' archives, dated December 7, 2002 (based on the URL), listing donors who contributed $5,000 each to an unspecified cause (likely a political campaign or charitable fund). The list includes individuals and corporations from various states including New York, California, and New Mexico. The document is part of a Department of Justice public records release (DOJ-OGR-00031251).
The text discusses the evolution of the Turing Test and AI communication, contrasting historical text-based interfaces with modern visual displays like Wolfram|Alpha. The speaker questions the utility of a conventional Turing Test, suggesting that a more practical application involves automating tasks like email responses using deep learning and personal data archives.
This document is an essay or book chapter titled 'The Human Strategy' by MIT Professor Alex 'Sandy' Pentland (page 135). It discusses the evolution of AI and cybernetics, arguing that we are moving toward 'human-AI ecologies' where machine learning is used to guide complex networks of people and systems, similar to managing ecosystems. The document bears a 'HOUSE_OVERSIGHT' Bates stamp, indicating its inclusion in a government investigation, likely related to Jeffrey Epstein's connections to academia and the MIT Media Lab.
This document is page 196 from a book titled 'Are the Androids Dreaming Yet?', stamped with a House Oversight Bates number (HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_015886). The text discusses the history of mathematics, specifically focusing on Russell and Whitehead's 'Principia Mathematica' (including an Amazon listing screenshot) and David Hilbert's famous 1900 lecture in Paris outlining unsolved mathematical problems. It touches on the 'Decision Problem' and the Clay Institute's Millennium Prizes. While part of an investigation file, the page itself contains historical narrative text and does not explicitly mention Epstein or his associates.
This document appears to be a page from a book titled 'Known Unknowns' included in House Oversight Committee evidence regarding Jeffrey Epstein. The text discusses the history and complexity of the mathematical work 'Principia Mathematica' (PM) by Whitehead and Russell, contrasting it with Newton's work of the same name. It highlights the book as a collector's item, noting its scarcity (750 copies printed) and financial value at auction.
This document appears to be page 172 of a manuscript, essay, or book, likely written by the subject of the investigation (possibly Jeffrey Epstein or an associate), produced as part of a House Oversight Committee inquiry. The text is a philosophical and theological reflection discussing the nature of evil, the intersection of science and religion (specifically mathematics and evolutionary process), and references various religious and academic figures like Alfred North Whitehead and Pierre Teilhard de Chardin. The author references personal interactions with 'English academicians' and friends at a 'mathematics institute.'
This document is page 389 of a bibliography from a book, likely related to mathematics, logic, physics, music, or consciousness studies, given the titles listed (e.g., 'Gödel’s Theorem', 'Musicophilia', 'The Emperor’s New Mind'). It lists citations for works by prominent scientists and thinkers such as Roger Penrose, Douglas Hofstadter, Oliver Sacks, and Alan Turing. The page includes a 'HOUSE_OVERSIGHT' Bates stamp, indicating it was produced as evidence for a congressional investigation, likely regarding Jeffrey Epstein's connections to the scientific community.
This document is a bibliography page (numbered 386) from a manuscript titled 'Are the Androids Dreaming Yet?', likely produced as evidence in a House Oversight investigation (document number 016076). It lists references for Chapter 2 and Chapter 3, citing works from 1986 to 2011 on topics including psychology, artificial intelligence, communication theory, and body language. While the document stamp suggests it is part of an investigation file (potentially related to Epstein given the user context), the text itself is strictly an academic or literary reference list with no direct mention of Epstein or his associates on this specific page.
This document is a page from a contact book (often referred to as Jeffrey Epstein's 'Little Black Book') containing entries for individuals such as journalist Walter Isaacson, financier Dr. Henry Jarecki, heiress Elizabeth 'Libet' Johnson, and Senator John Kerry. The document is dated around January 2003 based on a specific notation under John Kerry's entry. Notably, Elizabeth Johnson's entry contains multiple phone numbers labeled 'ERJ' (presumably Epstein's initials), suggesting shared resources or close proximity.
The text discusses the evolution and modern relevance of the Turing Test, contrasting historical text-based interactions with modern visual interfaces like those used by Siri and Wolfram|Alpha. The speaker argues that visual displays offer higher communication bandwidth than pure language and suggests that a more practical modern Turing Test would be an AI capable of automating personal email responses based on long-term user data.
This document appears to be page 135 of a book or essay titled 'The Human Strategy' by Alex 'Sandy' Pentland, a professor at the MIT Media Lab. The text discusses the evolution of AI and cybernetics, arguing for a shift from studying individual actors to understanding complex networks and 'human-AI ecologies.' The document bears a 'HOUSE_OVERSIGHT' Bates stamp, indicating it was likely collected as evidence during the congressional investigation into the MIT Media Lab's funding ties to Jeffrey Epstein, although Epstein is not mentioned in this specific text.
| Date | Type | From | To | Amount | Description | Actions |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2002-12-07 | Paid | Whitehead | Unknown (likely P... | $5,000.00 | Donation listed in Albuquerque Tribune archives | View |
| 2002-12-07 | Paid | Whitehead | Unknown Recipient... | $5,000.00 | Donation listed in Albuquerque Tribune | View |
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