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Engineer technicial drawings and mechanical parts engineering industry work project paper prints. Projectant hand with pencil, measuring tools on table.
Engineer technicial drawings and mechanical parts engineering industry work project paper prints. Projectant hand with pencil, measuring tools on table.

Study Information Theory with Engineer Robert J. Marks—and Save Over 50%!

Join computer engineer Robert J. Marks to take a deep dive into these issues and more in Marks’ new online course Evolutionary Informatics, which has just debuted at DiscoveryU
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What can we learn from information theory about the possibilities—and limits—of machine intelligence? How can the methods of probability help us better assess the capabilities of “evolutionary” algorithms?

Join computer engineer Robert J. Marks to take a deep dive into these issues and more in Marks’ new online course Evolutionary Informatics, which has just debuted at DiscoveryU, Discovery Institute’s online learning platform.
Tuition for the Evolutionary Informatics,course is set at $100, but with a special coupon code (2022special47) you can reduce the cost by more than 50% to just $47! The coupon code is valid through Feb. 28, 2022. Students can use a different code (2022special25) to reduce the cost of the course to $25, also through Feb. 28.


Dr. Marks is a Distinguished Professor of Electrical and Computer Engineering at Baylor University, as well as Director of the Walter Bradley Center for Natural and Artificial Intelligence at Discovery Institute and host of the Mind Matters News podcast. His new course is based on a book he co-authored with mathematician William Dembski and computer scientist Winston Ewert, Introduction to Evolutionary Informatics (World Scientific).

Marks’ course includes 41 short video lectures plus 41 quizzes, and it offers a digital certificate of completion for those who finish it. Topics include Shannon and Kolmogorov information theory, the necessity of domain expertise in search and design, the conservation of information, measuring information infused in computer programs by the programmer, defining when the “improbable” becomes the “impossible,” identifying problems that computers will never solve, and showing how meaningful information can be measured. Hands-on experience is provided with access to interactive software.

Some of the topics may sound daunting, but Marks is an engaging teacher, making complex ideas clear through down-to-earth explanations and simple analogies to things like cooking pancakes. If you are interested in exploring what we can learn about our world from information theory, sign up for the course today!


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Study Information Theory with Engineer Robert J. Marks—and Save Over 50%!