Difference between revisions of "如來佛掌心"
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In computing science, the most general analogy that one can conversationally speak of, is that all computing are some versions of '''[[search]]'''. Search as a an action, or as a function, is to identify certain '''goal''' in a contextualized data set. This statement will help one to better articulate the notion of computation in a unifying abstraction, all things are '''search'''. It follows the pattern of being universal. | In computing science, the most general analogy that one can conversationally speak of, is that all computing are some versions of '''[[search]]'''. Search as a an action, or as a function, is to identify certain '''goal''' in a contextualized data set. This statement will help one to better articulate the notion of computation in a unifying abstraction, all things are '''search'''. It follows the pattern of being universal. | ||
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Revision as of 04:10, 30 July 2021
Contextualized 如來佛掌心
When talking with User:Kevin, I realized that explaining the idea of Universality requires an intuitive, and culturally grounded analogy. I started talking about the palm of the Buddha, which was used in the famous novel, where it is the universal container that all things must be included in it boundary. On the other hand, it is a cognitive device in a literary work, that helps people to understand universality.
All computations are some kind of Search
In computing science, the most general analogy that one can conversationally speak of, is that all computing are some versions of search. Search as a an action, or as a function, is to identify certain goal in a contextualized data set. This statement will help one to better articulate the notion of computation in a unifying abstraction, all things are search. It follows the pattern of being universal.
Logic Model (如來佛掌心) Template:LogicModel 07 30, 2021 | ||||||
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