Husan Isomiddinov dan repost
#knowledge #research
When discussing how great ideas emerge, my students and I narrowed our speculation to a simple formula: input -> output. In other words, for one to possess ideas (great ones, not to mention), there should be an input---the input of ideas. The inference here is rather simple. We need great ideas to have great ideas. Paradoxical, indeed.
Yet, things are not that simple. We do not read great ideas to copy and paste them. Ideas, thoughts, speculations, conjectures, and any bit of intellect serve humans as a base to build upon. Existing knowledge furthers the ensuing one. Patterns turn into solid structures; dots into lines. The more input there is, the greater the output gets. That explains the mere 66-year timeframe from humanity's first-ever powered flight to the first step on our moon. Exponential was the progress indeed.
Knowledge works the same way. A greater input is needed. The website you see on the picture is the exact place for it. It publishes all the recent papers written in any walk of intellectual expansion. You can find everything from how Plato was an amazing wrestler to the evaluation of "AI-wars" the advent of China's Deepseek has engendered recently. An amazing resource, in a nutshell.
The main message: input for the output.
Link: ssrn.com
When discussing how great ideas emerge, my students and I narrowed our speculation to a simple formula: input -> output. In other words, for one to possess ideas (great ones, not to mention), there should be an input---the input of ideas. The inference here is rather simple. We need great ideas to have great ideas. Paradoxical, indeed.
Yet, things are not that simple. We do not read great ideas to copy and paste them. Ideas, thoughts, speculations, conjectures, and any bit of intellect serve humans as a base to build upon. Existing knowledge furthers the ensuing one. Patterns turn into solid structures; dots into lines. The more input there is, the greater the output gets. That explains the mere 66-year timeframe from humanity's first-ever powered flight to the first step on our moon. Exponential was the progress indeed.
Knowledge works the same way. A greater input is needed. The website you see on the picture is the exact place for it. It publishes all the recent papers written in any walk of intellectual expansion. You can find everything from how Plato was an amazing wrestler to the evaluation of "AI-wars" the advent of China's Deepseek has engendered recently. An amazing resource, in a nutshell.
The main message: input for the output.
Link: ssrn.com