| Jaynes, Edwin, Probability: The Logic of Science, bayes.wustl.edu/Jaynes.book 1995. |
....do not possess must be approached, for our purposes, as an empirical matter. For example, it appears that, in contrast with superb language talents and visual spatial processing, our mind is poorly equipped (or perhaps just too impatient) to handle probability questions and complex inference chains[43, 29, 41, 5]. As a consequence, inference tasks in the management of the knowledge home will have to be supported by a di#erent strategy than, say, syntactical expansion. 3.2 What shall the knowledge home know Conversely, what basic innate capabilities shall be built into the knowledge home Earlier we ....
Jaynes, Edwin, Probability: The Logic of Science, bayes.wustl.edu/Jaynes.book 1995.
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