Cube Framing: Difference between revisions

554 bytes added ,  06:50, 15 July 2023
added a section on the widely influential 'shovel' metaphor
mNo edit summary
(added a section on the widely influential 'shovel' metaphor)
 
Line 20: Line 20:
* Cube Framing is suspected to have been behind [[Allen Duan-Michael|Allen Duan-Michael's]] creation of the [[QuikLinks]] system in 2003.
* Cube Framing is suspected to have been behind [[Allen Duan-Michael|Allen Duan-Michael's]] creation of the [[QuikLinks]] system in 2003.
* Circumstantial evidence from the engineering teams behind the [[wikipedia:Apollo_program|Apollo program]] imply that an early form of Cube Framing was used to solve the problem of navigating through [[The Ball Wall]] in the 1960's.
* Circumstantial evidence from the engineering teams behind the [[wikipedia:Apollo_program|Apollo program]] imply that an early form of Cube Framing was used to solve the problem of navigating through [[The Ball Wall]] in the 1960's.
== The 'Shovel metaphor' ==
Doug Bleichner invokes a useful metaphor to explain how Cube Framing in the human mind is distinct from, and auxiliary to, artificial intelligence. He describes Cube Framing as a 'shovel,' and artificial intelligence as a 'dump truck.' <ref name=":0" /> This conceptual model has received almost universal praise across various academic fields, due to the fact that it acknowledges the importance and creativity of human problem-solving without undermining the exponentially powerful capabilities of artificial intelligence.
490

edits