Those of you who know me know that I have done a lot of reading in my time, focused on sci-fi/fantasy but with occasional forays into other literature.
Randall Garrett, who wrote many stories about "Lord D'Arcy" (his magic-world equivalent to Sherlock Holmes), also wrote a story called Unwise Child about an AI who could learn. In it, Garrett named something that he called "Lagerlocke's Principle" in which education was described as an "inelastic collision." The analogy he tried to present was that when we encounter something, it either affects us - and we learn something - or it doesn't affect us at all - and we learn nothing. An inelastic collision is what happens when two unyielding objects collide. For simple cases, think "billiard balls."
For the record, my web searches do not return anything for that name, but then again, if it is obscure enough, it might be real. Might not.
The physical analogy he used was a collision between two objects. If the objects were very hard, they bounced off each other and nothing changed. But if either of them had some degree of softness, the soft object would slightly deform. The super-hard objects would behave the same way for each collision but the softer objects would bounce differently (go at a different angle) if they had a collision on a place that had been changed. Imagine a collision two billiard balls. Then imagine a collision between a billiard ball and a ball of clay, followed by using that ball of clay a second time without reshaping it.
We use the term "hard-headed" for people who don't learn from their mistakes. We also talk about how we will "beat it into your head" regarding something you do that is not considered proper behavior. Perhaps Mr. Garrett was on to something? Learning is an inelastic collision?
Randall Garrett, who wrote many stories about "Lord D'Arcy" (his magic-world equivalent to Sherlock Holmes), also wrote a story called Unwise Child about an AI who could learn. In it, Garrett named something that he called "Lagerlocke's Principle" in which education was described as an "inelastic collision." The analogy he tried to present was that when we encounter something, it either affects us - and we learn something - or it doesn't affect us at all - and we learn nothing. An inelastic collision is what happens when two unyielding objects collide. For simple cases, think "billiard balls."
For the record, my web searches do not return anything for that name, but then again, if it is obscure enough, it might be real. Might not.
The physical analogy he used was a collision between two objects. If the objects were very hard, they bounced off each other and nothing changed. But if either of them had some degree of softness, the soft object would slightly deform. The super-hard objects would behave the same way for each collision but the softer objects would bounce differently (go at a different angle) if they had a collision on a place that had been changed. Imagine a collision two billiard balls. Then imagine a collision between a billiard ball and a ball of clay, followed by using that ball of clay a second time without reshaping it.
We use the term "hard-headed" for people who don't learn from their mistakes. We also talk about how we will "beat it into your head" regarding something you do that is not considered proper behavior. Perhaps Mr. Garrett was on to something? Learning is an inelastic collision?