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Frontier Research Intelligence

6 papers found
Space & PhysicsFoundationalFoundational Paper1994-05-01Verified (100)
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The warp drive: hyper-fast travel within general relativity

Miguel Alcubierre

This paper shows how, within the framework of general relativity, a metric can be constructed that allows space-time to contract in front of a spaceship and expand behind it, creating a warp bubble that enables faster-than-light travel relative to external observers, without violating local speed of light limits.

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NanotechnologyFoundationalFoundational Paper1981-09-01Verified (100)
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Molecular engineering: An approach to the development of general capabilities for molecular manipulation

K. Eric Drexler

This paper describes the principles of using biological models (like ribosomes) as a blueprint for building molecular-scale assembler machines, outlining the foundation for molecular nanotechnology.

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AI & CognitionFoundationalFoundational Paper1973-04-01Verified (100)
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Toward direct brain-computer communication

Jacques J. Vidal

The paper that coined the term 'Brain-Computer Interface' (BCI), presenting the first experimental setup showing that EEG signals could be decoded to determine a user's intent to control a cursor or object.

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Space & PhysicsFoundationalFoundational Paper1960-06-03Verified (100)
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Search for Artificial Stellar Sources of Infrared Radiation

Freeman J. Dyson

Dyson proposes that advanced extraterrestrial civilizations would build megastructures around their parent stars to capture maximum energy output, radiating waste heat in the infrared spectrum.

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AI & CognitionFoundationalFoundational Paper1950-10-01Verified (100)
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Computing Machinery and Intelligence

Alan Turing

Turing introduces the imitation game (now known as the Turing Test) to answer the question 'Can machines think?', laying out the philosophical foundations of artificial intelligence.

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Quantum TechnologyFoundationalFoundational Paper1935-05-15Verified (100)
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Can Quantum-Mechanical Description of Physical Reality be Considered Complete?

Albert Einstein, Boris Podolsky, Nathan Rosen

The Einstein-Podolsky-Rosen paradox paper that first identified what Einstein called 'spooky action at a distance', laying the foundation for quantum entanglement by arguing that quantum mechanics is either incomplete or violates locality.

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