> But this article, it sounds like everything is a nail
In the process, acting somewhat like a generalization of the problem it describes: overly precise and narrow approaches to "improve" ineffable qualities. But the author seems to understand that - he comments on the absurdity of some direct transfers of ML methods to real world problems. I think he just added a bunch of not necessarily well solvable, but particularly suffering from "overfitting", example problems. It's a food for thought article, not a grand proposal.
In the process, acting somewhat like a generalization of the problem it describes: overly precise and narrow approaches to "improve" ineffable qualities. But the author seems to understand that - he comments on the absurdity of some direct transfers of ML methods to real world problems. I think he just added a bunch of not necessarily well solvable, but particularly suffering from "overfitting", example problems. It's a food for thought article, not a grand proposal.