The Googol Room

 

The Googol Room is a private thinktank operating towards the betterment of human understanding.  If you are interested in further information on any of the machines, processes or institutions suggested here please feel free to contact us.

Email the Googol Room

Further Contact Information

Tutoring in Seattle

 

My apologizes if any are watching this site.  I am embroiled in patent and copyright considerations.  I plan to make this site more generally available (i.e. through search engines) once it has more content.

 

 

This is a list of links to essays on the given subjects.  Click on the title to see an essay; essays without active links are planned but not yet available.

 

Thinking machines:

(The grail machine - table of essays)

—     Temporal propositions and the resolution of the Gφdelian paradox

—     ZF+: A set theory for describing the mind

—     The physical construction of free will

—     Free will and the foundation of perception

—     Machines and emotional states

—     Basic scheme for the construction of artificial minds

(including the bases for two or more pre-emergent sciences)

—     Design, behavior and purpose

—     Behavior-driven technologies

—     General purpose artificial minds and man-made evolution

—     Integrated AI and Amind systems

Additional commentary

—     The faηade of the clockwork universe

—     Simple versus simplex

—     Playfulness and machines that play

—     AI, Amind, chaotic-intelligence and higher modes of thought

—    Aecology

—    The sensation of being

 

Education:

—     Titles in the study of logic

—     The resolution of advancing paradox

Methods of logical instruction:

—     Cryptics and evocatives

—     The benefit and use of koan in Eastern education

—     Koanics

—     A logic primer

 

Philosophy:

—     The metaphysical division in ZFC

—     Mnemonics for categorical unification

—     The evaluation of metaphysical systems

—     Meta-concerns for unification

—     Modern categorical metaphysics

—     Simple versus simplex

—     The nature of accident

—     Knowledge and the thing-in-itself