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by duncanawoods
3914 days ago
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I found that interesting as well. After thinking about it for a while, I struggled to get anything profound out of it. I feel his point is equivalent to saying "a higher level of abstraction can make problems more tractable" which is something we do all the time in all contexts. Finding good abstractions is an art but I don't think this really maps to insights like Copernicus though. I see a slightly different process happening i.e. discovering a new perspective on a problem. A new perspective can be a different way to decompose a problem but I don't think it necessitates anything about the sophistication of the building blocks. Instead, a revealing change is often because it changes the type of relationships between the building blocks in a radical way that enables new inferences. |
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So you try to solve the problem by getting faster cars, building better roads, hiring the best drivers - all with the goal of getting the notes from king A to king B as fast as possible.
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The 'abstraction' which I think Alan is talking about is not about how to make the car go faster between A and B - it is about stepping back and actually thinking about the context - what do we actually need ? We need a way to transfer messages between A and B.
And pretty soon you come up with the idea of using a membrane to convert voice into electrical signals and send those over a wire. So you install a cable between A and B and now the kings can chat all day long.
That's a much simpler and powerful solution, but not to the problems you were trying to solve (making the car go faster), but to the problem in the upper scope - sending messages from A to B.
This was the gist of Alan's talk imho.