The machine can use stored information, whether calculations and/or inputs, to perform actions that avoid errors or unwanted results. For example, in an article about a car heading to the exit of a maze, the machine was able to reach the end of the maze through the process of elimination or trial and error for possible routes. Furthermore, he managed to reach the end in another attempt without errors, using the information gathered during the first attempt. The significance of this article is that it shows how machines use previous information to become more efficient in producing results (Ross, 1938). This idea can also be applied to the logic piano, the machine must be put through a test run to see how well it could produce a result and then its configuration, or its previous information, is changed to produce results more efficiently and without problems. errors. The consequences of my answer to the question of whether machines can think like humans might concern how morality would affect machines or whether free will is present in machines. With the concept of morality, machines would make objective judgments about controversial ideas that might differ from how humans would judge the ideas, even though machines can do so similarly to humans. For example, the logical plan might logically conclude from a set of given premises that good people can kill children is morally right because it is logically right.
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