Deep Blue Beat Kasparov: What Chess Teaches Us About Human and Machine Thinking
In 1997, the world watched as Garry Kasparov, the greatest chess master, faced off against Deep Blue—a powerful computer capable of evaluating 200 million chess moves per second. This historic event challenged our ideas about intelligence and thinking. Unlike humans, Deep Blue used brute-force calculation and step-by-step logic to win, while Kasparov relied on intuition and pattern recognition honed by experience. Exploring their different approaches reveals fascinating insights into human intuition, artificial intelligence, and the evolving relationship between minds and machines.
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