Let it be remarked... that an important difference between the way in which we use the brain and the machine is that the machine is intended for many successive runs, either with no reference to each other, or with a minimal, limited reference, and that it can be cleared between such runs; while the brain, in the course of nature, never even approximately clears out its past records. Thus the brain, under normal circumstances, is not the complete analogue of the computing machine but rather the analogue of a single run on such a machine. We shall see later that this remark has a deep significance in psychopathology and in psychiatry.


V. Computing Machines and the Nervous System. p. 121. - Cybernetics: Or Control and Communication in the Animal and the Machine (1948)


Let it be remarked... that an important difference between the way in which we use the brain and the machine is that the machine is intended for many ...

Let it be remarked... that an important difference between the way in which we use the brain and the machine is that the machine is intended for many ...

Let it be remarked... that an important difference between the way in which we use the brain and the machine is that the machine is intended for many ...

Let it be remarked... that an important difference between the way in which we use the brain and the machine is that the machine is intended for many ...