The question of Artificial Intelligence remains open, but it is clear that machines already possess experience, and it is in fact our Experience.
The structure of Human Experience
– not on media but in the brain – is still a mystery.
Visualizing the machine's experience will bring us closer to understanding how our own Experience is structured.
Although the images of time produced by Clocks, Calendars, and Timelines reflect the properties of our perception, they are not time itself. Moreover, each of them reflects only part of the properties.
Perhaps these images may simply be low-dimensional projections of a more complex image reflecting more properties at once.
Time most often appears to us as spatial. So there must be a separate geometry of time, just as there are many geometric models of space?
Unfortunately, this is not the case, but such a model can be very useful for visualizing time exactly as we experience it.
The information in our memory is not data, but experience. Experience does not exist outside of time and therefore requires special formalization.
This means going beyond the formalizations created by Consciousness, which are inherently spatial, not temporal.
Experience is only accessible to the Observer, but we do not observe time directly.
However, using Temporal Formalization, we can create an Artificial Observer that visualizes what remains hidden to us.
The Michelson–Morley experiment and the discovery of X-rays and radioactivity once led to a revision of the established paradigm and gave us the Theory of Relativity and Quantum Mechanics.
Big Data, Smart Sensors, and Neural Networks are comparable frontiers that yet again require expanding our vision.
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