260 Are the Androids Dreaming Yet? write out the symbols in a table and assign a musical note to each. It is straightforward to put these notes into a synthesizer and play the piece of music. I have provided a link to such a piece. Warning: once you listen to this you will have been ‘creatively inoculated’ This resulting piece of music, based on the transliteration of a proof, is non-computable. You might immediately argue with this, “The piece of music was translated from proof text to music file using a computer. It is clearly computed’, but this is not my point. The music could not have come into existence in our Universe as a result of a computation. It is a computable translation of a non-computable string. It could not have been generated solely by a computer: It was done in two steps, the first of which could not have been computed. If, up to this time, our Universe has never contained a piece of music that was generated non-computationally, it does now. If you listen to this piece, you will find it impossible not to be somewhat inspired by it. You cannot erase the experience from your memory. And once you have heard it you will have been creatively inoculated. I have defeated Daniel Dennett and his like, and given you creative freedom! www.jamestagg.com/noncompmusic Having made at least some music above the Turing limit I could declare victory but I want to go further. Using the same reduction method, I believe we can show all art is above the limit. First let’s attempt novels and plays. Do you enjoy those crime novels by Agatha Christie and Colin Dexter? It must be possible to construct a plot sufficiently complex, and a murder sufficiently baffling that it exceeds the logic limit. I could keep extending this idea to provide any number of examples and, therefore, prove all art and creative output is above the logic limit. There are many other arts we could apply this argument too. In the visual domain there are non-computable images. In principle, it i