Images can't encode knowledge

Knowledge consists of information that applies to a range of possible situations. Analogue images, however, only carry information about the situations from which they rose; in themselves, they lack generality of application.

Zenon Pylyshyn (1973).

Note: Also see the "Can computers represent the analogue properties of images?" arguments on this map.
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Quasi-pictorial images are adequate
Images can't encode knowledge
Zenon Pylyshyn
Images are Quasi-pictorial representations
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