Analogue machines lack flexibility of digital machines
Analogue devices can't make contingent if-then branches—ie analogue devices can't do "one thing under one set of circumstances and a completely different thing under a discretely different set of circumstances."
This limitation can be overcome by adding a discrete threshold element, but that still does not make an analogue device the best way to represent cognitive processes.

Zenon Pylyshyn (1974, p.68).
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Artificial Intelligence »Artificial Intelligence
Can computers think? [1] »Can computers think? [1]
Yes: physical symbol systems can think [3] »Yes: physical symbol systems can think [3]
The Biological Assumption »The Biological Assumption
Neurons operate like logic gates »Neurons operate like logic gates
Brain is an analogue device »Brain is an analogue device
Analogue machines lack flexibility of digital machines
Zenon Pylyshyn »Zenon Pylyshyn
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