Carroll, L. (1956). What the tortoise said to achilles and other riddles. In Newman, J.R. (ed.) The World of Mathematics: Volume Four. New York, N.Y., Simon and Schuster.

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Connectionism and Cognitive Architecture: A Critical Analysis - Fodor, Pylyshyn (1988)   (189 citations)  (Correct)

....do agree about is that it can t be that all behavioral regularities are determined by explicit rules; at least some of the causal determinants of compliant behavior must be implicit. The arguments for this parallel Lewis Carroll s observations in What the Tortoise Said to Achilles ; see Carroll 1956). All other questions of the explicitness of rules are viewed by Classicists as moot; and every shade of opinion on the issue can be found in the Classicist camp. The basic point is this: not all the functions of a Classical computer can be encoded in the form of an explicit program; some of them ....

Carroll, L. (1956). What the tortoise said to achilles and other riddles. In Newman, J.R. (ed.) The World of Mathematics: Volume Four. New York, N.Y., Simon and Schuster.

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