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
(one imagines - my evolutionary history is fuzzy - that it begins in the sea, with the development of fin-like structures to regulate movement in water currents, before taking off from there). — StreetlightX
If you're talking about a socially constructed aesthetics, you're still talking about aesthetics. But that's exactly what I've insisted upon this entire time. — StreetlightX
As someone who believes in the primacy of the aesthetic as a grounds for knowledge, modelling relations constitute a highly constrained - that is, particular - form of knowledge, whereas my own interests lie in the direction of a more general understanding of what it is to know. We are sensate bodies long before we are inference-mongering, reflexive intellects. — StreetlightX
Phenomenology is always going to be a misleading exercise if it is set up as a search inside for what is nakedly really there. — apokrisis
I'm just saying that much of language is just a bizarre cluster of formal restrictions that seem to be pretty robust across the world's languages and that you'd never guess just by seeing language as an embodied tool, or something like that. — The Great Whatever
As such, the human experience of language - or rather human language tout court - is shaped by the fact that we are motile, kinesthetic, haptically sensitive and habit-engendered beings. — StreetlightX
On the one hand I think it's inevitable that language as used by people has to be grounded bodily somehow, but there's also no doubting that it has emergent formal and mathematical properties that aren't traceable in any straightforward way to them. — The Great Whatever
what is your opinion on multiverse theory; and its possible implications on the points made above? — Mustapha Mond
My whole point is that 'symbolic abstraction' is very much a part of nature, and one can only stare blankly at your so-called commitment to the "continuity of nature" while consistently pitting nature and culture, sensibility and intelligibility against one another. Where you see division I simply see mutual function — StreetlightX
Symbols would be nothing - empty formalism - without their capacity to affect make an affective difference. — StreetlightX
In mathematics, the Poincare recurrence theorem states that "a system whose dynamics are volume-preserving and which is confined to a finite spatial volume will, after a sufficiently long time, return to an arbitrarily small neighbourhood of its initial state". — Mustapha Mond
Equally, the oscillating universe theory, originally supported by Einstein, speculates that that the known universe ends in a "big crunch" which is followed by another big bang and another crunch etc. etc. in a process which continues indefinitely. — Mustapha Mond
And what do you think language is if not a (particular kind of) aesthetic phenomenon? — StreetlightX
In the words of Emanuele Coccia, "language is a superior form of sensibility." There's much to say about language - if not culture itself - as a fundamentally digital (and hence self-reflexive, hierarchically structured) form of behavior, but again, there's no fundamental break from sensibility that digitality effects; not to mention that language, contrary to popular understanding, is primarily phatic - concerning intersubjective relations between speakers - rather than non-phatic - concerned with the relaying information between speakers — StreetlightX
We are sensate bodies long before we are inference-mongering, reflexive intellects. — StreetlightX
What argument? — StreetlightX
Ah yes, I must be like those pesky feminists, who, in fighting for the equality of women, must hate all men. — StreetlightX
But I guess equivocation is kind of your thing, like how this automatically means all notion of heirarcy ought to be expunged. — StreetlightX
Ah yes, because my acerbic off-hand comment about an ancient philosopheme is no different to my position on hierarchies tout court. Methinks you no inference-mong so good. — StreetlightX
Funny, I don't believe I've used the word hierarchy once in this conversation, but feel free to conjure up disagreements as you are consistently wont to do. — StreetlightX
The Great Chain of Being. Among the most important of the continuities with the Classical period was the concept of the Great Chain of Being. Its major premise was that every existing thing in the universe had its "place" in a divinely planned hierarchical order, which was pictured as a chain vertically extended.
http://faculty.up.edu/asarnow/greatchainofbeing.htm
The spirit is not to be known by discursive reasoning, but by the natural activity of embodied intuition. So, I would say that the nature of order is the order of nature, but it is not limited to the order of nature discovered by science. There is a whole other order of nature to be revealed by the aesthetic, the ethical, the religious and the spiritual. — John
When someone says "this limited, tiny sphere of being is what I think matters more than anything else' (be it spirit or molecules or God), then by definition everything else is of a lesser value. — StreetlightX
Check out something like Mark Johnston's The Meaning of the Body or Maxine Sheets-Johnston's The Roots of Thinking[/]i. Deleuze and Levinas have also written some wonderful things about this, but I would not expect that'd you'd ever read them. — StreetlightX
We are sensate bodies long before we are inference-mongering, reflexive intellects. — StreetlightX
As someone who believes in the primacy of the aesthetic as a grounds for knowledge, modelling relations constitute a highly constrained - that is, particular - form of knowledge, — StreetlightX
