Can Machines Think in Radio Language?
Yujian Li

TL;DR
This paper explores the possibility of machines thinking in radio language, proposing a principle that could enable robot astronauts to communicate effectively in space, potentially advancing autonomous space exploration.
Contribution
It introduces the principle of language's relativity as a foundation for enabling machines to think in radio language, a novel concept for space communication.
Findings
Proposes the principle of language's relativity for radio language
Suggests radio language thinking could enhance space robot communication
Highlights potential for autonomous space exploration communication
Abstract
People can think in auditory, visual and tactile forms of language, so can machines principally. But is it possible for them to think in radio language? According to a first principle presented for general intelligence, i.e. the principle of language's relativity, the answer may give an exceptional solution for robot astronauts to talk with each other in space exploration.
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Taxonomy
TopicsRobotics and Automated Systems · Space Science and Extraterrestrial Life · Computability, Logic, AI Algorithms
