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A Spin Glass Model of Human Logic Systems | Fariel Shafee
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8 Sep 2005 | Subject: | Physics and Society | physics.soc-ph | Abstract: | In this paper, we discuss different models for human logic systems and describe a game with nature. Godel`s incompleteness theorem is taken into account to construct a model of logical networks based on axioms obtained by symmetry breaking. We start by saying that although an agent is rational, the axioms defining different agent’s logic systems need not be the same although they might have a large degree of overlap. This can be seen as each agent being coupled to a higher dimensional world by means of his perception where the couplings produce slightly different projections of the higher dimensional world to each agent. The different projections would produce slightly different concepts about the "world" to each agent and hence create a slightly differing set of axioms that each agent would use to act logically. Then we place the agents in an interacting logical network, where these axioms can be treated as spins that can be flipped as agents interact with each other and with the environment in which they are placed. Agents, who would share a common material world that they wish to use or change by using different or conflicting sets of axioms will try to flip the other agent’s axioms (This can be seen by observing that as one agent acts to interact with his world as followed by his axiom, another agent’s world changes as well, and the change might be contradictory to the second agent’s "axioms" or "optimal world". We define an equation that allows an axiom to be flipped into an "anti axiom (the opposite or conflicting axiom)" as agents interact. All agents share an "existence" axiom by means of which they strive to perpetuate themselves or the network. | Source: | arXiv, physics/0509065 | Other source: | [GID 99240] nlin.AO/0211013 | Services: | Forum | Review | PDF | Favorites |
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