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Abstract
The Reverend Bayes was born in London, like two other founding fathers of computing, Charles Babbage and Alan Turing. His grave is in London’s Bunhill Fields, off the City Road, where shoemakers ‘popped their weasels’ (pawned their tools) to pay for drinks in The Eagle public house. The Fields were a burial pit for plague victims – hence their name, a corruption of ‘Bone Hill’. Bayes keeps company in Bunhill with William Blake, John Bunyan and Daniel Defoe. Blake’s grave, where he lies with Sophia, is often marked by flowers. Bayes’ grave is undistinguished and unnoticed by visitors. Yet Bayes’ theorem on probability is now a vital tool for understanding the problem that neural networks and the brain itself have in inferring ‘what is out there’ from its sensory input.
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