[CLIP]
>   We may be uncomfortable with the idea of spider intelligence.  After
> all, with a brain no bigger than a pinhead, a spider like Portia is
> supposed to follow rigid, simple behavior patterns.  There's no much
> room in there for thinking.  But from its deadly skill at mimicry to its
> elaborate attack strategies, Portia is one of the most behaviorally
> complex predators in the animal kingdom."
Hmm...  A pinhead-brain can hold a LOT of neurons.  At least 100,000, if 
my physical intuition doesn't fail me completely.  At that rate, it 
should have enough processing power to outdo any extant single-processor 
supercomputer.  [I won't speculate on the hypercube machines.  In a 1994/5 
Scientific American, it was documented that a image-processing program 
running on one of those machines learned to see more effectively 
over 3 hours: WITHOUT ANY EXPLICIT LEARNING CODE!!!]
I'm willing to entertain computer intelligence.  Portia has a huge edge 
over the computers, so spide intelligence is hardly disturbing.
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/   Towards the conversion of data into information....
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/   Kenneth Boyd
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