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thesztoday at 9:38 AM2 repliesview on HN

  > Human brains aren't magic, special or different.
DNA inside neurons uses superconductive quantum computations [1].

[1] https://www.nature.com/articles/s41598-024-62539-5

As the result, all living cells with DNA emit coherent (as in lasers) light [2]. There is a theory that this light also facilitates intercellular communication.

[2] https://www.sciencealert.com/we-emit-a-visible-light-that-va...

Chemical structures in dendrites, not even neurons, are capable to compute XOR [3] which require multilevel artificial neural network with at least 9 parameters. Some neurons in brain have hundredths of thousands of dendrites, we are now talking of millions of parameters only in single neuron's dendrites functionality.

[3] https://www.science.org/doi/10.1126/science.aax6239

So, while human brains aren't magic, special or different, they are just extremely complex.

Imagine building a computer with 85 billions of superconducting quantum computers, optically and electrically connected, each capable of performing computations of a non-negligibly complex artificial neural network.


Replies

Kim_Bruningtoday at 11:46 AM

All three appear to be technically correct, but are (normally) only incidental to the operation of neurons as neurons. We know this because we can test what aspects of neurons actually lead to practical real world effects. Neurophysiology is not a particularly obscure or occult field, so there are many many papers and textbooks on the topic.(And there's a large subset you can test on yourself, besides, though I wouldn't recommend patch-clamping!)

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danielblntoday at 11:26 AM

They are extremely complex, but is that complexity required for building a thinking machine? We don't understand bird physiology enough to build a bird from scratch, but an airplane flies just the same.

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