Laan Tungir

npub1rmz9gu6de0m0u4ysrn39crrud099ahvfgs6pvasl4hpjr5ud7yus54xv06

hex

111827e710a1be26ae2db63aa96ed22331a10d28659d7bfb9cd92097ca05dd2b

nevent

nevent1qqspzxp8uug2r03x4ckmvw4fdmfzxvdpp55xt8tmlwwdjgyhegza62cprpmhxue69uhhyetvv9ujuem4d36kwatvw5hx6mm9qgspa3z5wdxuhah72jgpecjup37xhjj7mky5gdqkwc06msep6wxlzwg5kxhc2

Kind-1 (TextNote)

2026-06-14T21:19:09Z

↳ 回复 Sourcenode (npub1jfn4ghffz7uq7urllk6y4rle0yvz26800w4qfmn4dv0sr48rdz9qyzt047)

I studied psychology for many years and still do. There are several coneptual models for understanding how the brain works. One of them is the compute...

To be clear, I am not making a metaphor about the brain being a computer. I'm stating that the brain IS a computer. It has memory where it can store information over time, and it can run computations on that stored information. The brain is a computer. Not an analogy.

And no, understanding that a brain is a computer does not imply that all thoughts and emotions (computer code) can therefore be understood at the atomic or chemical level, or be derived from physics.

The rules of code running inside computers is emergent. It doesn't depend on what the computer running it is made up of. Just like the next best move in a game of chess don't depend on whether the chess pieces are made from glass or brass.

原始 JSON

{
  "kind": 1,
  "id": "111827e710a1be26ae2db63aa96ed22331a10d28659d7bfb9cd92097ca05dd2b",
  "pubkey": "1ec454734dcbf6fe54901ce25c0c7c6bca5edd89443416761fadc321d38df139",
  "created_at": 1781471949,
  "tags": [
    [
      "e",
      "108c1149cd0de83dfa0ea1075435437ed510f7ee7a26033741330e5fa5b9940b",
      "",
      "root",
      "1ec454734dcbf6fe54901ce25c0c7c6bca5edd89443416761fadc321d38df139"
    ],
    [
      "e",
      "f4ee8df4a6e191fa1f0452633a4300f5c5b98646ada3e84563ffd5a57bd68451",
      "",
      "reply"
    ],
    [
      "p",
      "1ec454734dcbf6fe54901ce25c0c7c6bca5edd89443416761fadc321d38df139",
      "wss://premium.primal.net/"
    ],
    [
      "p",
      "abaa09dab1fc3fffc1409fdb28b13832cd4031704c4df6198525fa7ea466bed2",
      "wss://nostr21.com/"
    ],
    [
      "p",
      "9267545d2917b80f707ffdb44a8ff979182568ef7baa04ee756b1f01d4e3688a"
    ],
    [
      "r",
      "wss://sendit.nosflare.com/",
      "write"
    ],
    [
      "r",
      "wss://relay.damus.io/"
    ],
    [
      "r",
      "wss://relay.laantungir.net/"
    ],
    [
      "r",
      "wss://relay.mostr.pub/"
    ],
    [
      "r",
      "wss://relay.minibits.cash/",
      "read"
    ],
    [
      "r",
      "wss://nostr.mom/"
    ],
    [
      "r",
      "wss://premium.primal.net/"
    ],
    [
      "client",
      "Primal Web"
    ]
  ],
  "content": "\nTo be clear, I am not making a metaphor about the brain being a computer. I'm stating that the brain IS a computer. It has memory where it can store information over time, and it can run computations on that stored information. The brain is a computer. Not an analogy.\n\nAnd no, understanding that a brain is a computer does not imply that all thoughts and emotions (computer code) can therefore be understood at the atomic or chemical level, or be derived from physics.\n\nThe rules of code running inside computers is emergent. It doesn't depend on what the computer running it is made up of. Just like the next best move in a game of chess don't depend on whether the chess pieces are made from glass or brass. \n\n\n",
  "sig": "1397784dcf17aa2aa64459321faae2b39bf179d230388da41db7a9a585351e04f580e6accf0499a9f54a0d021790f705a6c08395bb85e1a752b7c3b1b5b8926a"
}