That's true. I haven't been limiting my discussion to human brains but to brains. Brains are the cognitive systems. Nothing else comes close.As I've stated, the redundancy of the human mind is very beneficial to us but it isn't beneficial or even necessary if your trying to create cognition.
Because concepts are not definite. All of computing, and indeed all of mathematics revolves around making procedures extremely specific. If I define an object "car Volvo = car" then there is only one such object defined exactly like this in one specific place in the computer. That's precision. It's fantastic for calculating but it's terrible for creating abstract generalization. To make computers do things we define very explicit procedures. They must be mindless procedures because computers have no minds. They are not aware of anything and cannot contain in their memory systems the representation of any "thing". They represent states that drive procedures alone. They are big calculators. They are akin to a car in that you give input (with a car, gasoline) that ensures the computer or car generates certain specified routines.Curious why it can't just be as simple as, machine sees car, machine receives several concepts of the car and understands it.
That's not what humans do. Because humans don't have any memory storage akin to a computer. Human memory is not only distributed but is part of "processing". That's why the computer metaphors fail so completely. What allows us to classify things abstractly is (at least in part; we don't know whatever else might be vital) the fact that we encode memories constantly through multiple nonlocal connections between active patterns. There is no place in your brain corresponding to "car" and if there were you wouldn't be able to understand "car". Because when you process concepts your brain relies on actively connecting patterns across multiple distributed regions that are not unique to "car" because "car" itself isn't unique- it is connected to multiple different related concepts. The human brain is not compartmentalized like a computer. While this means it cannot attain anything like the precision of a computer, it also makes conscious awareness and conceptual processing possible.This isn't what a human does? Sees car, brain interprets object based on what is in memory.
All the behind the scenes stuff doesn't get to the root of the issues of simply seeing an object and interpreting that object "correctly".
That's because it isn't simple. Why do you classify a car as distinct from the street it is on but not from the wheels it is on?
Computers don't do it. period.It's like your saying the computer is wrong unless it does it like a human, meh.