Check out the chess board above—looks wrong,softcore movies right?
If you’ve ever played chess, you know something's amiss, here. For one thing, someone chose to exchange a pawn for another bishop instead of a queen. For another, virtually all the action's moved to the left side of a board.
It’s hard to imagine how the game got here—it's even harder to imagine what happens next, let alone a scenario in which four white pawns and a white king could play to a draw, or even win this game.
Yet: scientists at the newly-formed Penrose Institute say it’s not only possible, but that human players see the solution almost instantly, while chess computers consistently fail to find the right move.
“We plugged it into Fritz, the standard practice computer for chess players, which did three-quarters of a billion calculations, 20 moves ahead," explained James Tagg Co-Founder and Director of the Penrose Institute, which was founded this week to understand human consciousness through physics.
"It says that one-side or the other wins. But," Tagg continued, "the answer that it gives is wrong."
SEE ALSO: These flying robots will soothe your workday bluesTagg and his co-founder, Mathematical Physicist and professor Sir Roger Penrose—who successfully proved that black holes have a singularity in them—cooked up the puzzle to prove a point: Human brains think differently.
(Those who figure out the puzzle can send their answers to Penrose to be entered to win the professor's latest book.)
Humans can look at a problem like this strange chess board configuration, said Tagg, and understand it. “What a computer does is brute force calculation, which is different. This is set up, rather exquisitely, to show the difference,” he added.
They forced the computer out of its comfort zone by, at least in part, making an unusual choice: the third bishop.
“All those bishops can move in lots of different ways, so you get computation explosion. To calculate it out would suck up more than computing power than is available on earth,” claimed Tagg.
Tagg told us that there is, in fact, a natural way to get to this board configuration.
Sir Richard Penrose’s brother is, according to Tagg, a very strong chess player. “He assures me that it’s a position you can get to, but I have not played it through. Question is, is there a rational game that gets you there?”
In fact, those who can figure out that second puzzle and get the answer to Penrose, could also receive a free copy of Professor Penrose’s book.
Chess computers fail at Penrose’s chess puzzle because they have a database of end-games to choose from. This board is not, Tagg and Penrose believe, in the computer’s playbook. “We’re forcing the chess machine to actually think about the position, as opposed to cheat and just regurgitate a pre-programmed answer, which computers are perfect at,” said Tagg.
So far, Tagg and the Penrose Institute haven't heard from an artificial intelligence experts refuting their claims. “I’m quite surprised,” said Tagg.
Mashable has contacted several AI experts for comment and will update this post with their response.
Aside from the fun of solving this puzzle (Tagg said hundreds already have and claim they have done so in seconds), it poses a deeper question: Are we executing some fiendishly clever algorithm in our brain, that cuts through the chaff? It is just a higher level of computation, one that computers can still aspire to or something unique to brain-matter-based thought?
Tagg said Penrose Institute falls into the latter camp.
Penrose and Tagg don’t think you can simply call a brain a machine. “It sits in skull, made of gray matter and we don’t understand how it works. Simply calling it a clever computer, this sort of puzzle shows that it clearly is not,” he said.
You can send your Chess Puzzle solution to the Penrose Institute here: [email protected].
Topics Artificial Intelligence
Wordle today: The answer and hints for February 21Apple's newest ad makes a haunting plea to take climate change seriouslyYouTube bests Netflix, Disney+ as the top streamer of 2023Prince's secret energy investment could help solar startups under TrumpBest TV deals Feb. 2024: Shop a ton of last year's Samsung QLEDs at major discountsApple's newest ad makes a haunting plea to take climate change seriouslyGet up to 44% off Samsung monitors at AmazonZendaya and Timothée Chalamet sport matching coveralls for 'Dune: Part Two' promoA flatworm may have sprouted 2 heads because it lived in spaceTens of millions will roast in first major U.S. heat wave of the seasonNYT's The Mini crossword answers for February 22YouTube bests Netflix, Disney+ as the top streamer of 2023Hawaii to Trump: Sorry, we're sticking with the Paris Climate AgreementHow much does OnlyFans pay? It's the most lucrative side hustle.The 8 best wireless earbuds for 2024: Compare AirPods Pro to cheaper optionsYour favorite weatherman, Brad Pitt, is back with another depressing forecast for the worldTwitter/X staff ignored Elon Musk's orders, prevented an FTC violationPrime Video's 'Poacher' takes a deep dive into the ivory trade in IndiaWhy is your phone in SOS mode? U.S. cell services have faced outages all morning.A hedgehog blown up 'like a beach ball' was popped in life 'For Honor' fans debating whether or not it's cool to gang up on people: Yes it is Take our money, Broadway: Sara Bareilles is joining the cast of 'Waitress' Using Microsoft Word with the MacBook Pro Touch Bar is pretty cool Mark Zuckerberg just said he wants Facebook to save the world The Chelsea Clinton guide to taking down Trump on Twitter Detective Benson and Stabler reunited for Valentine's Day and our hearts are full of love Aflac says cyberattack may have exposed customer data A Lisa Frank makeup line could be in your rainbow Ohio woman excellently trolls Trump from the grave Antarctica just shed a Manhattan Google Home adds voice shopping feature with Google Express Sprint unveils new unlimited plan to compete with Verizon and T Lenovo's latest Chromebook Plus comes with free AI features Rufio from 'Hook' could get his own movie Dude defies physics and saves toddler from falling off a counter Police are mad about a 'Grand Theft Auto' mod and all the internet can do is LOL Get your allowance ready: Snap's stock will cost about as much as a movie ticket Tinder buys video app Wheel to make itself more like Snapchat Apple's war against you repairing your iPhone is pure corporate greed The best early Prime Day book deals already live: Save on hardcovers, paperbacks, and Kindle books
2.5539s , 10134.0546875 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【softcore movies】,Wisdom Convergence Information Network