For some reason until recently, nowhere I heard about programming did it explain that object-oriented programming is essentially a reverse projection of the human brain, everywhere I heard about programming before it said something like, at best, that procedural programming is ugh and object-oriented is cool, it did not explain that procedural programming is much closer to the language that reality thinks in, and inventing “objects” is just a crutch for the imperfect monkey brain
All this came to my mind when I noticed that people tend to think of drugs as if a drug is an object that has the property of “curing”, like a potion in a video game or a real “potion” from antiquity. And people are still extremely prone to think about viruses, bacteria, antibiotics, vaccines, and the like in this way. Not to imagine a specific mechanism for how it’s supposed to work, but just to assume that the drug as a whole will “cure.” And of course the same goes for poisons, people not familiar with biology think of them as having an inherent property to “poison,” or on a deeper level, acids, as having an inherent property to “dissolve.
And if you go back to the question of reverse projection of the human mind, it becomes obvious that human language is not something that came out of nowhere, it is a product of the human brain, so language must also be a projection of its structure, and therefore you need reverse projection as objects in a broader sense, so specifically convolutional neural networks here, to work with it properly.
For some reason until recently, nowhere I heard about programming did it explain that object-oriented programming is essentially a reverse projection of the human brain, everywhere I heard about programming before it said something like, at best, that procedural programming is ugh and object-oriented is cool, it did not explain that procedural programming is much closer to the language that reality thinks in, and inventing “objects” is just a crutch for the imperfect monkey brain
All this came to my mind when I noticed that people tend to think of drugs as if a drug is an object that has the property of “curing”, like a potion in a video game or a real “potion” from antiquity. And people are still extremely prone to think about viruses, bacteria, antibiotics, vaccines, and the like in this way. Not to imagine a specific mechanism for how it’s supposed to work, but just to assume that the drug as a whole will “cure.” And of course the same goes for poisons, people not familiar with biology think of them as having an inherent property to “poison,” or on a deeper level, acids, as having an inherent property to “dissolve.
And if you go back to the question of reverse projection of the human mind, it becomes obvious that human language is not something that came out of nowhere, it is a product of the human brain, so language must also be a projection of its structure, and therefore you need reverse projection as objects in a broader sense, so specifically convolutional neural networks here, to work with it properly.