id author title date pages extension mime words sentences flesch summary cache txt work_h7wjd4jeinbvlf5wfchkvg4ozy J. R. LUCAS HUMAN AND MACHINE LOGIC: A REJOINDER 1968 2 .pdf application/pdf 796 41 64 We can imagine a human operator playing a game of one-upmanship against a programmed If the program is Fn, the human operator can print the theorem Gn, which the 'mentalist' to argue that any given program can always be improves since the process for mechanism is true, a complete specification of the mental mechanism of each human being can Gödelian formula G, which a human being can see to be true. that a second computer, that is, another computer, could do as well as a human operator on this that it is the second computer that matches the human being, then there is another Gödelian formula which the second computer cannot produce as true but which a human being can. was not superiority---is the mind better than the machine, or vice versa?---but equality---is this, (1) I.J. Good, Human and Machine Logic, This Journal, 18,1967, pp.145-146. ./cache/work_h7wjd4jeinbvlf5wfchkvg4ozy.pdf ./txt/work_h7wjd4jeinbvlf5wfchkvg4ozy.txt