| Connected Entity | Relationship Type |
Strength
(mentions)
|
Documents | Actions |
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
person
Roger Penrose
|
Intellectual influence |
5
|
1 | |
|
person
Roger Penrose
|
Academic succession |
5
|
1 | |
|
person
Kurt Gödel
|
Academic analysis |
5
|
1 |
| Date | Event Type | Description | Location | Actions |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1959-01-01 | N/A | J.R. Lucas wrote the paper 'Minds, Machines and Gödel'. | Oxford University | View |
This document is a single page (Preface, page xi) from a book, marked with a House Oversight Bates stamp (015685). The text is a philosophical discussion by an engineer-author regarding artificial intelligence, consciousness, and free will, referencing works by Roger Penrose, Douglas Hofstadter, and Daniel Dennett. The author argues against determinism and computational theories of mind, citing Andrew Wiles' 1996 proof of Fermat's Last Theorem as evidence of non-algorithmic human creativity.
This document appears to be page 205 from a book titled 'Known Unknowns' or a similar academic text, stamped with a House Oversight footer (HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_015895). The text discusses mathematical inconsistency, the Peano axioms, and the implications of equating numbers (like 0 and 1) on logic systems. It introduces 'The Lucas Argument' regarding J.R. Lucas, Gödel's theorem, and Roger Penrose's later work arguing that the human mind functions outside formal rules, challenging Strong AI.
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