No, big data will not mirror the human brain — no matter how advanced our tech gets

By Christian Madsbjerg and Mikkel Krenchel

Wouldn’t it be incredible if we could create minds as powerful as our own but more reliable, less in need of coffee, and incapable of making mistakes? It’s a tempting proposition. But it’s also a red herring, leading the tech conversation astray.

“Understanding the human mind as a type of natural “supercomputer” relies on an outdated perspective on human intelligence that modern philosophy has long since laid to rest.”

There is an unfortunate assumption in many tech circles that people and computers think alike. A belief that thinking is fundamentally the same process whether it takes place in the human mind or in the circuit board of a computer. Perhaps — techies might say — the computers of today still trail the human mind in a few areas, but, over time, technology will come to surpass the human mind’s ability to solve all kinds of problems. Indeed, many techies point triumphantly to how computers have already left the feeble human brain in the dust when it comes to such thinking tasks as answering jeopardy questions or playing chess.

But this idea doesn’t do justice to the wonders of the human mind, nor to the amazing potential of contemporary technology.

Read the full article on VentureBeat here.


[Banner image by Alina Grubnyak, via Unsplash]

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