Tag Archives: Logic

23Feb/26

The Molecular Structure of Thought: Why You Can’t Just “Copy-Paste” AI Reasoning

Feb 22, 2026 /Mpelembe media/ — This research explores the structural stability of Long Chain-of-Thought (CoT) reasoning in large language models by using a chemical bond analogy. The authors identify four primary reasoning behaviors—normal operation, deep reasoning, self-reflection, and exploration—which act as “bonds” that stabilize the logical progression of a model. By applying mathematical modeling and Gibbs–Boltzmann energy distributions, the text demonstrates how self-correction and hypothesis branching prevent “hallucination drift” and ensure self-consistency. Comparative testing across various models, such as LLaMA and Qwen, reveals that high structural correlation between reasoning chains is necessary for maintaining performance. The study also utilizes Sparse Auto-Encoders and t-SNE visualizations to map the geometric compactness of these thought processes in embedding space. Ultimately, the findings suggest that semantic compatibility and rigid cognitive architectures determine a model’s ability to solve complex mathematical and scientific problems. Continue reading

29Apr/23

Why critical thinking is an important skill in the age of AI.

April 29, 2023 /Business/ — It will require critical thinking and systems thinking to get the most out of AI tools. Being a Prompt Engineer will become a great skill to have in your toolbox. Prompt engineers simply need a decent level of language and grammar skills, data analysis, and critical thinking.

Prompted Critical thinking is the key. AI generators are not designed to assess the veracity of text they input and output. Nor are they intended to use any sort of critical thinking, which is why jobs that require critical thinking are not about to be replaced by Generative AI.

You don’t need to memorize – it’s time to focus on real-life skills, critical thinking, and emotional intelligence. The critical thinking required to enter a prompt and use AI tools effectively is worth training for – not the memorization of information. Continue reading