What if the most powerful minds—whether artificial, human, or something beyond—aren’t defined by their ability to explain things, but by their ability to function despite uncertainty?"
We created AI to think for us, but now we’re realizing it doesn’t think like us. It recognizes patterns too deep for human intuition, makes decisions we can’t fully explain, and solves problems in ways we never would. And that makes us uncomfortable—not just because it’s unpredictable, but because it forces us to confront the fact that we are also black boxes.
READ: The Computer that Runs on Human Neurons
Via: El País https://www.cryptogon.com/?p=72417
I’ve posted about this before. I think it’s worth monitoring closely because my guess is that this (or something like it) is how a disorderly advance in AI could happen.
Lab-grown brain cells are the basis for the functioning of the CL1, which has been announced as the first commercially-sold biological computer.