Spyke
saigotreply
lemmy.ca

The modern version of this trick is bunny the dog, that dog that "talks" by pushing buttons.

32

I really want to teach my cat how to speak but I struggle to believe this isnt confirmation bias.

11
lemmy.world

I always just wrote this little tale off as "good at reading people", and honestly that's still my assumption. After reading Blindsight though, I think it's a good allegory for possible intelligence without consciousness. What if the horse just has the ability to perform those kind of calculations when incentivized, but has no concept of what it's actually doing beyond responding to stimulus.

Then again I knew a horse that would recreationally lick electric fences, so probably not that. Interesting thought though.

41

I know a guy that has multiple kids because he doesn't think condoms work, but that didn't stop Ramanujan from immediately recognizing 1729 as the smallest number expressible as the sum of two (positive) cubes in two different ways while he was sick in a hospital

19

he "disappeared" in WWI, says the wiki. It could be that he's out there right now, tapping away to the cube roots of all kinds of things.

7
lemmy.world

That's nothing, once I went through the desert on a horse with no name.

27
tetris11reply
kbin.social

And, what of it? Were you able to remember details about yourself?

8

I'm just going to start singing "ba laa laa lalalala" and I hope you will join int.

3
lemmy.world

How else would he extract the cube root of numbers if not mentally?

19

Pencil and paper. Or a calculator. Obviously. My CPA is a horse. Loves stomping around on his giant TI83.

19

You reached the end

mathrule | Spyke