Dear Mr. King, I totally agree with what you say regarding diversity in range of problems requiring different solutions. Perhaps that agreement was also reflected in my earlier post at https://lists.debian.org/debian-user/2022/05/msg00854.html
The higher order truth that I am trying to arrive at is that we can have only a very limited cognitive gifts. A beyond-human level AI will be unrestricted by such limitations. In my other post to Mr. DdB at https://lists.debian.org/debian-user/2022/05/msg00857.html I said that I was fortunate to have read some on Beyond. I overlooked to mention Dr. Steven Greer and his work there. Reality is One. Our limited cognitive abilities makes it appear piece-meal, we approach them piece-meal and we try to solve our problems piece-meal. We don't realise that we don't address the Big Picture. Also that how Big is this Big. But as I have promised to myself in the post at https://lists.debian.org/debian-user/2022/05/msg00854.html, I shall continue to make tiny inroads into Python until the Singularity arrives. Thank you for educating me, like Mr. Ilya Kazakevich <k***y...@gmail.com>,Mr. Joe <j***@jr***g.com> and Mr. Edwin Zimmerman <ed***@pl**il.net> did, and you all have my admiration for that. Best wishes, Rajib To: debian-user@lists.debian.org Subject: Re: How should learning to program in c++ be approached, if learning objectives are sought to be customised? From: Alex King <al**@r***g.com> Date: Wed, 1 Jun 2022 12:29:32 +1200 Message-id: <[🔎] bb9ae618-bbbe-e557-5150-aadf49615...@rimuhosting.com> In-reply-to: <20220530172154.308ba20...@bendel.debian.org> References: <20220530172154.308ba20...@bendel.debian.org>