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Wish you luck! I am neither a physicist nor a mathematician.

I'll argue about what I know which is computational cognitive neuroscience: how the brain computes and why mathematics is not the correct approach. A computational approach is the correct approach (viz., brain computation is a complicated collection of systems based on a universal computation unit -- not the neuron as unit, not the synapse -- where the math of the computation in any particular type of unit is quite variable owing to input and output requirements but not variable in the universal function .)

Thanks for the compliment on the article about Maxwell. I still can't believe he pulled together what he did, the way he did it. Truly genius. There are some missing things in electromagnetic field theory, actually many, that are left to be better understood of course.

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Robert Thibadeau
Robert Thibadeau

Written by Robert Thibadeau

Carnegie Mellon University since 1979 — Cognitive Science, AI, Machine Learning, one of the founding Directors of the Robotics Institute. rht@brightplaza.com

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