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On Wed, 03 Dec 2003 21:16:18 GMT, island <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> in comp.ai.philosophy wrote: >Lester Zick wrote: >> >> Cognitive Inference >> >> What is the process by which we see things? Most who think we see >> things would suggest that the process is one of perceptual inference. >> Then the question becomes how do we think of things that are not >> perceptual in nature and have no direct perceptual referrents? My >> contention is that this process represents cognitive inference. >> >> Now the question is how? If we consider that perceptual inference uses >> differences the answer becomes obvious. If the brain/mind complex >> takes differences in order to establish perceptual properties, why not >> just take differences among such differences to establish a basis for >> cognitive iinference. >> >> The suggestion then is that perceptual inference is drawn among >> properties in the visual field but that cognitive inference is drawn >> between properties in different perceptual fields. >> >> Regards - Lester > >Sounds to me like you're saying that cognitive inverence is drawn >between properties of a more refined level differentiation of the same >perceptual field. I suppose this is also possible. But I have something a little different in mind for this idea. At present I'm just trying to establish a practical means of locomotion in mechanical terms. Regards - Lester
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