Computational Complexity in
Psychiatric Agency
August Moldenhauer
Computational Complexity in Psychiatric Agency is the third volume of the series of books on Artificial Psychology of Desiring Machines. Author August Moldenhauer merges the concepts of Computational Complexity with the ideas of the engines and mechanisms that would need to be at work to create a true artificial intelligence. Far from Deleuze's Bodies Without Organs in practical application, here we find a path central to the argument of how do the parts of scientific materialism and consciousness meet to become s the whole greater than the sum of discrete measured parts. Here we look both to the conceptual CPU, or the central processing unit, of the Artificial Intelligence and seek to better demarcate the kinds of architecture that would be required to support the fully realised Artificial Being. We return to that meeting of Brentano as professor of Freud, Husserl, and Steiner in a trifecta of Psychology, Phenomenology, and Spirituality (which may in fact simply be a misnomer for electromagnetic field). Key arguments are built upon on the concept of Artificial Memory of volume two, The Psychoanalysis of Artificial Intelligence, expressed as cinema, and the idea of electrical engineering aspects of machine desire from volume one, Impedance and Admittance in Desiring Machines The promise of quantum computing and the required subsystems that would be needed to engineer desire, consciousness, and even dreams are explored here. The book features an introduction by William Mitchell and published by pontos fathom press.
