Semantics cannot exist without syntax.
To implement any notion of semantics will entail syntax and the logical relationships within that syntax.
To ground this symbol manipulation simply means to place some agency in the role of being invested in outcomes from decisions. — m-theory
How is the panpyschist that different from a pragmatic semiotic theorist if both take experience as a brute fact? — schopenhauer1
Well, that is not sensation, that is the structure in which sensation works within, not the sensation itself. — schopenhauer1
I don't get how logic is sensation then. I'm all ears. — schopenhauer1
Also, I think you might find interest in at least some of what the analytics have to say, particularly Koslicki, Loux, Lowe and Tahko (hard-core hylomorphist neo-Aristotelians). — darthbarracuda
The late E.J. Lowe, Jonathan Schaffer, Tuomas Tahko, Ted Sider, Susan Haack, Michael J. Loux, the late David Lewis, Peter van Inwagen, Timothy Williamson, Amie Thomasson, Sally Haslanger, David Chalmers, Kit Fine, D. M. Armstrong, Trenton Merricks, Eli Hirsch, Ernest Sosa, Daniel Korman, Jaegwon Kim, etc.
The analytics. — darthbarracuda
You read Heidegger, Husserl, the idealists? — darthbarracuda
Also, contemporary realist metaphysics is largely concerned with ontology and not with the broader metaphysical stories. — darthbarracuda
It's far more conservative than your version of metaphysics, with the only notable things I can think of being discussions of supervenience, grounding, causality and semantic meaning. — darthbarracuda
I'd still like to know what you think are examples of bad metaphysics. — darthbarracuda
What is this particular way? The semiotic trifold? — darthbarracuda
What legitimate differences are there between your conception of metaphysics and theoretical physics? — darthbarracuda
Nobody pays you to think about the world, they pay you for results that can be applied to the economy in some way, and everyone's gotta pay the bills. — darthbarracuda
I don't really understand what you have in mind when you say "romanticism" or "PoMo". Do you not appreciate Spinoza, Descartes, Husserl, Heidegger, etc? Only some? Only those who aren't easily fitted into your pragmatism? — darthbarracuda
Well, yes and no. If measurement is the only way of understanding the world (what I see as empiricism), then either is must be shown how philosophy utilizes measurement, or it must be seen with skepticism. — darthbarracuda
Usually philosophy utilizes things like counterfactual reasoning, thought experiments, etc. Other fields use these as well. These are generally "fuzzy" in their nature, though. When a philosopher thinks up something like, let's say, Neo-Platonism, it's extremely abstract and fuzzy. — darthbarracuda
In other words, a constraint is a totally different kind of thing from a zebra. The latter is studied by biologists, the former (as it is-itself) the metaphysician. — darthbarracuda
I'm referring to contemporary realist analytic metaphysics. — darthbarracuda
There's different methods within this broad "scientific" account you presented. If you're an astronomer, you'll use a telescope. If you're a microbiologist, you'll use a microscope. If you're a chemist, you'll use a thermometer and a plethora of other expensive equipment; same goes for practically any scientific field. — darthbarracuda
The point being made, though, is what exactly is the subject matter of philosophy, in particular metaphysics, that makes it a legitimate attempt to understand the world, and why this subject matter is usually unable to be studied by more..."mainstream" science. — darthbarracuda
There aren't really any "discoveries" within metaphysics, just explanations of what we already see on a day-to-day basis. — darthbarracuda
...there seems to be more than one method of understanding the world. — darthbarracuda
Here's a definition of self-organization I came across at BusinessDictionary.com: "Ability of a system to spontaneously arrange its components or elements in a purposeful (non-random) manner, under appropriate conditions without the help of an external agency."
There are a number of questionable issues here. — Metaphysician Undercover
But the traditionalist account of intelligibility was such that it conveyed the sense of a complete, (if you like illuminated) understanding, in the sense of there no longer being any shortcoming or gap between the understanding and the thing understood. — Wayfarer
I think 'intelligible' traditionally relates to ordinary speech, not to philosophical discourse, and means that we can make out what the person is trying to communicate. — andrewk
In philosophy, intelligibility is what can be comprehended by the human mind in contrast to sense perception. The intelligible method is thought thinking itself, or the human mind reflecting on itself.
Plato referred to the intelligible realm of mathematics, forms, first principles, logical deduction, and the dialectical method. The intelligible realm of thought thinking about thought does not necessarily require any visual images, sensual impressions, and material causes for the contents of mind.
Descartes referred to this method of thought thinking about itself, without the possible illusions of the senses. Kant made similar claims about a priori knowledge. A priori knowledge is claimed to be independent of the content of experience.
If the mind is something you can be sure that you have and that you can be sure correctly each time you inquire about the presence of your own mind...this would mean the term mind will be something that is fundamentally computational. — m-theory
But one can have an a-utility understanding. For example: you understand that Gandalf loves his Hobbits. This is true understanding, but it is also useless understanding — IVoyager
Now I'm skeptical of science alone being able to answer these questions, as if it can operate without a rudimentary metaphysical structure, but what remains to be shown is why this is the case - that is to say, why some questions are empirical and other apparently not. — darthbarracuda
Note the mention of worth/value, which is a sort of ineffable ground. — who
If it is indeed the case that science has an epistemology, then this just further shows how philosophy is a separate and prior domain. — darthbarracuda
For example, "science" cannot tell us whether or not we should be scientific realists, or what a property is, or what constitutes knowledge. — darthbarracuda
There might be material facts that influence what sort of identities we impose on what sort of things, but the connection is merely contingent, not necessary. — Michael
No of course I don't agree that the best theory of the mind must be biological. — m-theory
I offered the that the pomdp could be a resolution.
You did not really bother to suggest any reason why that view was not correct. — m-theory
Mind is only found in living organic matter therefor only living organic matter can have a mind.
That is an unasailable argument in that it defines the term mind to the exclusion of inorganic matter.
But that this definition is by necessity the only valid theory of the mind is not simply a resolved matter in philosophy. — m-theory
It is not immediately clear to me how this general statement can be said to demonstrate necessarily that computation can not result in a mind. — m-theory
My argument is on the first page below Tom's post. — m-theory
Of course I disagree that the mind must necessarily always be biological...but that is a semantic debate surrounding how the term is defined.
You have decided that the term mind must be defined biologically to the exclusion of a computational model. — m-theory
Yes and as far as I could tell from your source material it was claimed that the origin of life contains a quantum measurement problem.
The term epistemic cut was used synonymously with the quantum measurement problem and the author continuously alluded to the origins of self replicating life. — m-theory
Imagine if the body and brain had a sudden interruption in the supply of electrons within its neurological system?
Biology is not without stability. — m-theory
I don't agree semantics can only occur in biology. — m-theory
Again I refer to the alternative of a undecidable mind.
We could not know if we had one if the mind is not algorithmic it is that simple.
If we can know without error that we have minds this is the result of some algorithm which means the mind is computational. — m-theory
We might disembody a head and sustain the life of the brain without a body by employing machines.
Were we to do so we would not say that this person has lost a significant amount of their mind.
Would we? — m-theory
My notion was that we might hope to model something like the default mode network. — m-theory
If you state that the origins of life must be understood in order that we understand the mind that is claim that entails burdens of proof. — m-theory
The main issue at hand is whether or not computational theory of the mind is valid.
Not whether or inorganic matter can compute. — m-theory
And I believe that somewhere in the middle is where the mind breakthrough will happen.
I believe this because a great deal of what the body and brain do is completely autonomous from the mind...or at least what we mean by the term mind. — m-theory
For this reason I think simulations of thought do not have to recreate the physics of biology at the nano scale before a mind can be modeled. — m-theory
I just don't agree that intelligence is necessarily dependent upon that state.
I don't see why computers can not be the "right stuff" as you put it.
Pattee does not provide conclusive evidence that such is the case.
And you haven't either. — m-theory
But I don't agree that we have to solve the origin of life and the measurement problem to solve the problem of general intelligence. — m-theory
I suppose if you want to argue that the mind ultimately takes place at a quantum scale in nature then Pattee may well be correct and we would have to contend with the issues surrounding the measurement problem. — m-theory
What is wrong with bayesian probability I don't get it either? — m-theory
I have read some more and you are right he is very technically laden. — m-theory
I was hoping for a more generalized statement of the problem of the epistemic cut because I believe that the Partially observable Markov decision process might be a very general solution to establishing an epistemic cut between the model and the reality in an A.I. agent. — m-theory
Vern S. Poythress - Semiotic analysis of the observer in relativity, quantum mechanics, and a possible theory of everything
http://frame-poythress.org/wp-content/uploads/2016/06/PoythressVernSemioticAnalysisOfTheObserver.pdf
In the field of Physics emphasis in the Peircean semiotic categories has been attempted in different ways. There are three modes of being, the three phenomenological categories of C. S. Pierce:
1. Firstness = the potential.
2. Secondness = the actual.
3. Thirdness = the general.
In Peirce's philosophy these categories are very broad concepts with applications in metaphysics, cosmology, psychology, and general semiotic. In Classical Mechanics only Secondness occurs: There is no spontaneity (Firstness) and no irreversible tendencies to seek equilibrium in various types of attractors (Thirdness), only specific states leading to specific trajectories through the state space.
In Thermodynamics both other categories enter the scene: Thirdness by the irreversible tendency of the systems to end in an equilibrium state, determined by the boundary conditions, where all features of the initial state have been wiped out by internal friction. Firstness is reflected in thermodynamics by the spontaneous random fluctuations around the mean behavior, conditioned by the temperature and the frictional forces.
The Firstness category is the most difficult to grasp, because when we try to exemplify it by specific examples and general types we are already introducing Secondness and Thirdness. However, Firstness has made a remarkable entry into Quantum Mechanics through the concept of the wave function as describing the state of a system. The properties of a system that are inherent in its wave function are only potential, not actual. An electron has no definite position or momentum; these properties only become actualized in the context of specific types of apparatus and acts of measurement.
I argue that because this algorithm has to learn from scratch it must discover it's own semantics within the problem and solution to that problem. — m-theory
Consider the task of creating robot hand that is deleterious as the human hand. — m-theory
So again...this algorithm, if it does have semantic understanding...it does not and never will have human semantic understanding. — m-theory
Pattee's epistemic cut was not very clear to me, and he seems to have coined this term. — m-theory
I was seeking to make a distinction between simulating a human being and simulating general intelligence....I was using the criterion of if a computer could learn any problem and or solution to a problem that a human could... — m-theory
Bahaha, douchebag. — StreetlightX
I still take the inferential constraints required by modelling to be particularizations of a more general aesthetic without having to place them into opposition, as you are wont to do — StreetlightX
What's interesting about Leroi-Gourhan's approach is that he does not simply and reductively oppose the aesthetic with the rational, but rather finds within the aesthetic a rationality of it's own, which is then progressively constrained for the sake of higher order abstraction; — StreetlightX
I assure you, from a computer science perspective, it is no equivocation to say that the deepmind general purpose ai is an algorithm. — m-theory
Perhaps I am missing something? — m-theory
Is the mind an algorithm — m-theory
