thinkism

名词 n.

英文释义

名词 n.
  1. The principle that any problem or technological obstacle can be solved by spending large amounts of effort in thinking about a solution. uncountable
    — Kevin Kelly, the Wired editor at large, says he admires Kurzweil but makes a well-argued rebuttal to what he calls "thinkism". This is, Kelly says, where we believe the main thing we lack in solving problems is not being able to think enough. So, if we put enough cycles in we can find the answer to anything: a sufficiently advanced AI would have more think cycles than all of humanity combined, therefore any problem you can imagine would be solved in a jiffy.

词源

Etymology tree
Proto-West Germanic *þankijan
Old English þenċan
Middle English thinken
English think
Proto-Indo-European *-id-
Proto-Indo-European *-yéti
Proto-Indo-European *-idyéti
Proto-Hellenic *-íďďō
Ancient Greek -ῐ́ζω (-ĭ́zō)
Proto-Indo-European *-mos
Proto-Indo-European *-mós
Ancient Greek -μός (-mós)
Ancient Greek -ισμός (-ismós)der.
English -ism
English thinkism
From think + -ism.
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