archive
archive
archive
archive
archive
archive
archive
archive
archive
archive
archive
archive
archive
archive
archive
archive
archive
archive
archive
archive
archive
archive
archive
archive
archive
archive
archive
archive
archive
archive
archive
archive
archive
archive
archive
archive
archive
archive
archive
archive
archive
archive
archive
archive
312320.2011

The efforts made to simulate the mind through an interim language like mathematics is akin to a purgatory, always looking up or down but never reaching the solution above or the primitive it once was, and the mind was much better before the mezzanines of Turing. In linguistics, which attempts to unlock the mind from a different set of rules, Turing's cousin on the math-plateau is Jackendoff, who believes in universal spoken language, one that hides aesthetic sympathies and disguises them as semantic. Of course math rules the finer points of the Jackendoff attempt at neurolinguistics. 

Login or register to post comments
Comments