claim
active
concept:tame-proposes-a-conceptual-unification-that-would-facilitate-porting-of-tools-across-disciplines-and-model-systemsTAME proposes a conceptual unification that would facilitate porting of tools across disciplines and model systems.
Source paper
extracted_from(2022) · Levin, Michael
Related by similarity (8)
cosine ≥ 0.65 · no typed edgeEntities in the same semantic neighborhood but without a typed relation to this one — candidates for new edges or unrecognized duplicates.
- Implicitly referenced through Levin's broader research program on agents and machine behavior
- TAME is incompatible with binary views that cut off consciousness at a particular sharp line.claim0.768If mechanisms for consciousness are present in brains, they are also present in many other tissues.
- A conceptual framework for understanding cognition and intelligence across diverse substrates—including evolved biological systems, artificial systems, and bioengineered systems—using empirically-grounded, gradualist approaches. TTAME enables comparative analysis of mind-like phenomena regardless of the physical or biological substrate in which it emerges, facilitating cross-disciplinary study of unconventional intelligences.
- Distinguishes TAME from panpsychist views; emphasizes role of organization.
- Kay argues that presenting draw, spreadsheet, and text as instances of the same rectangle/rule abstraction reduces cognitive load versus separate systems.
- Explains a key consequence of generative communication.
- Third central claim: biology and computer science are converging into a unified science of embodied computation
- If a model is taught about tanha/latch systems, it may improve its performance in managing mental stacks.hypothesis0.739Hypothesis prompted by Atlas Forge's claim; suggests a new training intervention.