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Nanobrain: The Making of an Artificial Brain from a Time Crystal

Nanobrain: The Making of an Artificial Brain from a Time Crystal

Current price: $140.00
Publication Date: June 17th, 2020
Publisher:
CRC Press
ISBN:
9781439875490
Pages:
354

Description

Making an artificial brain is not a part of artificial intelligence. It will be a revolutionary journey of mankind exploring a science where one cannot write an equation, a material will vibrate like geometric shape, and then those shapes will change to make decisions. Geometry of silence plays like a musical instrument to mimic a human brain; our thoughts, imagination, everything would be a 3D shape playing as music; composing music would be the brain's singular job. For a century, the Turing machine ruled human civilization; it was believed that irrespective of complexity all events add up linearly. This book is a thesis to explore the science of decision-making where events are 3D-geometric shapes, events grow within and above, never side by side. ​

The book documents inventions and discoveries in neuroscience, computer science, materials science, mathematics and chemistry that explore the possibility of brain or universe as a time crystal. The philosophy of Turing, the philosophy of membrane-based neuroscience and the philosophy of linear, sequential thought process are challenged here by considering that a nested time crystal encompasses the entire conscious universe. Instead of an algorithm, the pattern of maximum free will is generated mathematically and that very pattern is encoded in materials such that its natural vibration integrates random events exactly similar to the way nature does it in every remote corner of our universe. Find how an artificial brain avoids any necessity for algorithm or programming using the pattern of free will.

About the Author

Anirban Bandyopadhyay is Senior Scientist in the AdvancedKey Technologies Division at the National Institute forMaterials Science (NIMS) in Ibaraki, Japan. He earned hisPhD in supramolecular electronics, physics, and materials sciencein 2005. He was subsequently a research fellow at NIMS'International Center for Young Scientists as well as a permanentfaculty member at NIMS. Dr. Bandyopadhyay was avisiting scientist at the Massachusetts Institute of Techno logyin 2013-2014 and has been recognized with multiple awards, e.g. Hitachi Science & Technology Award 2011, InamoriFoundation Award 2011, etc. In 2016, Dr. Bandyopadhyayestablished the International Institute of Invincible Rhythms(iioir.org) in Shimla, India.