And all of that "innate knowledge" still fits into under 1 gigabyte of compressed DNA.
1 gigabyte. That's the absolute limit of how much "innate knowledge" a human brain can have in it! Every single instinct, every learning algorithm, every innate behavior and every little cue a brain uses to build itself has to fit into a set of data just 1 gigabyte in size.
Clearly, nature must have found some impressively large levers - to be able to build and initialize brain with 90 billion connected neurons in it off something this small.
> all of that "innate knowledge" still fits into under 1 gigabyte of compressed DNA.
Yes, the same way Turing completeness fits in 8bits, which is both perfectly true (see rule 110) and perfectly useless to derive any conclusion about the limitation of innate knowledge.
Similarly, just because you can encode the number Pi in just two bytes (the ASCII for both “p” and “i” letters) it doesn't mean the number contains only two bytes of entropy.
1 gigabyte. That's the absolute limit of how much "innate knowledge" a human brain can have in it! Every single instinct, every learning algorithm, every innate behavior and every little cue a brain uses to build itself has to fit into a set of data just 1 gigabyte in size.
Clearly, nature must have found some impressively large levers - to be able to build and initialize brain with 90 billion connected neurons in it off something this small.