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103 results for "combination problem" — page 3 of 6
INTERDOC_32 — AI, Consciousness, and the Ethical Frontier
[KEY FINDING] The alignment problem — ensuring that artificial intelligence systems pursue goals aligned with human values — has moved from science fiction to mainstream AI safety research. Stuart Russell (Human Compatib
AI_Hallucination_Consciousness_Filter_Theory
ZB_2_23 — Cephalopod Intelligence and Distributed Cognition
Cephalopods — octopuses, cuttlefish, squid, and nautiluses — represent one of evolution's most extraordinary experiments in intelligence, having diverged from the vertebrate lineage approximately 530 million years ago ye
ZB_2_06 — Immune System Evolution: From Innate to Adaptive Defense
The immune system represents one of evolution's most complex adaptive innovations — a multi-layered defense system that distinguishes self from non-self and remembers past encounters. All multicellular organisms possess
ZB_1_08 — Cephalopod Intelligence and Cognition
Cephalopods — octopuses, squid, cuttlefish, and nautiluses — represent the pinnacle of invertebrate cognitive evolution, having independently evolved complex brains and sophisticated behaviors along a lineage that diverg
ZC_1_19 — Moral Psychology
Moral psychology — the scientific study of how humans develop, experience, and exercise moral judgment — has undergone a revolution since the early 2000s, shifting from Lawrence Kohlberg's rationalist stage theory (1958–
G_4_14 — Replication Crisis and What It Means for Ancient Claims
The replication crisis refers to the discovery, beginning in the early 2010s, that a substantial proportion of findings published in peer-reviewed scientific journals — particularly in psychology, social science, and bio
G_3_24 — Post-Normal Science: Funtowicz, Ravetz, and Uncertainty
Post-normal science (PNS) is a framework for understanding and managing scientific inquiry when facts are uncertain, values in dispute, stakes high, and decisions urgent — conditions that characterize many of the most cr
T_2_02 — Neurodiversity — Cognitive Variation as Adaptive Spectrum
The neurodiversity paradigm, articulated by sociologist Judy Singer in 1998, frames neurological differences—including autism, ADHD, dyslexia, synesthesia, Tourette syndrome, and other developmental conditions—not as pat
T_1_05 — Moral Psychology — Haidt, Kohlberg, Moral Foundations
Moral psychology — the empirical study of how humans make moral judgments and develop moral understanding — has undergone a revolution over the past two decades, shifting from Lawrence Kohlberg's rationalist stage theory
ZD_1_01 — Algorithms, Computation, and the Limits of Knowledge
An algorithm is a finite, unambiguous sequence of instructions for solving a problem — a concept formalized independently by Alan Turing (Turing machine, 1936) and Alonzo Church (lambda calculus) in response to David Hil
ZD_1_06 — Boolean Algebra and Logic Gates: The Mathematics of Digital Systems
Boolean algebra, formalized by George Boole in 1854, reduces logical reasoning to algebraic manipulation of binary values (TRUE/FALSE, 1/0). This seemingly simple mathematical system became the foundation of the entire d
ZD_1_10 — Automata Theory and Formal Languages
Automata theory studies abstract computational machines and the classes of languages they recognize, forming the mathematical backbone of computer science. The Chomsky hierarchy (1956–59) classifies formal languages into
ZD_1_11 — Turing Machine, Computability, and the Limits of Computation
The Turing machine — a mathematical model of computation defined by Alan Turing in his 1936 paper "On Computable Numbers, with an Application to the Entscheidungsproblem" — is the foundational formalism of theoretical co
ZD_3_03 — Distributed Systems and Consensus
Distributed systems — collections of independent computers that appear to users as a single coherent system — are fundamental to modern computing infrastructure: the internet, cloud computing, databases, blockchain, and
ZD_2_06 — Ethics of AI and Algorithmic Bias
AI ethics examines the moral implications of designing, deploying, and governing artificial intelligence systems, while algorithmic bias refers to systematic errors in automated decision-making that produce unfair outcom
ZD_2_07 — Artificial General Intelligence — Architectures and Challenges
Artificial General Intelligence (AGI) — a hypothetical AI system capable of performing any intellectual task that a human can, with the same flexibility, generality, and ability to learn and transfer knowledge across dom
L_4_10 — Sex Chromosome Evolution
Sex chromosomes — the genetic elements that determine biological sex in many organisms — represent one of the most remarkable stories in genome evolution. In mammals, the XX/XY system prevails: females have two X chromos
L_3_10 — Telomeres Aging and Longevity Genetics
Telomeres — the repetitive DNA sequences (TTAGGG in vertebrates) capping the ends of linear chromosomes — protect genome integrity by preventing chromosome ends from being recognized as double-strand breaks and triggerin
Y_4_05 — Dreams, Dream Incubation, and Oneiric Knowledge
Dreams have been treated as a source of knowledge, prophecy, and divine communication in virtually every civilization. Ancient Mesopotamians maintained professional dream interpreters (šāʾilu) and compiled dream omen com
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