Welcome to my website!
I publish here my theories which are utterly unpublishable otherwise, for reasons that should be obvious.
Evolution and abiogenesis
While mutations, drifts, and natural selections are important mechanisms of evolution, especially on side-branches (not leading to humans), I think they cannot fully explain the huge jumps in evolution, introducing highly adaptive features.
So I propose a new underlying mechanism for evolution and speciation, based on extremely ‘lucky’ series of mutations in the non-coding DNA. Even though the probability of accumulating these very precise mutations is practically zero, they will occur somewhere in the infinite universe.
As we can only observe planets where intelligent life has developed, we are bound to see these extremely unlikely ‘jumps’ between species, at least on the ‘main branch’.
Abiogenesis has a similar explanation: the first cells might have been formed by random synthesis of all the needed DNA, RNA, and proteins, over mineral surfaces acting as both catalysts and chaperones.
So LUCA (the Last Universal Common Ancestor) may have been developed in a single, unlikely step, without any evolution, or going through stages like the RNA world.
Theory of the human (and animal) brain
My goal here is to describe biologically realistic building blocks, that can be combined in well-defined ways to create realistic behaviours, and replicate human and animal cognition, intent, and emotions.
Backpropagation is out of question, and so is some other AI techniques like convolutional NNs.
I use two building blocks, both based on STDP (Spike-timing dependent placticity, a better version of Hebbian learning).