Synthesized answer
The provided passages do not explicitly list unanswered questions from the book "Analogy-Making as Perception."
However, the passages do highlight the importance and challenges of understanding and modeling analogical thought [Passage 2]. They also describe Copycat, a computer model of analogy making, as occupying a unique intermediate position in cognitive modeling approaches that is useful for understanding the fluidity of concepts and high-level perception [Passage 1, Passage 2]. This suggests that the book likely delves into the complexities and ongoing research in these areas.
Synthesized from the book passages below. Chat with the book on Feynman for follow-up.
From the book
inistic activities. In the spectrum of cognitive modeling approaches, Copycat occupies a unique intermediate position between symbolic systems and connectionist systems a position that is at present the most useful one for understanding the fluidity of concepts and high-level perception. -- Publisher description.
Title: Analogy-making as perception by Melanie Mitchell Description: The psychologist William James observed that "a native talent for perceiving analogies is ... the leading fact in genius of every order." The centrality and the ubiquity of analogy in creative thought have been noted again and again by scientists, artists, and writers, and understanding and modeling analogical thought have emerged as two of the most important challenges for cognitive science. Analogy-Making as Perception is based on the premise that analogy-making is fundamentally a high-level perceptual process in which…