No that's not the point. The point is that the computer behaves in an entirely intelligible manner, while Kasparov's mind doesn't. The real point is that the human mind is superior to the computer, not because it can out-calculate it, but precisely because it can't, and therefore finds a better way. It's unintelligible how the human mind skips the 99% of bad moves - without doing any calculation - and focuses on calculating just the 1% potentially useful moves. And yet, what the human mind does when it does this is intelligent - even though it appears foolish.Yes, that's exactly it. Kasparov is capable of deceiving the computer, the computer is not capable of deceiving Kasparov. — Metaphysician Undercover
Yes it appears intelligent to me because I think it is good, even though I can't specify how it is good.If there is nothing to make the act appear intelligent to you, then the act is not intelligible to you. — Metaphysician Undercover
Not really. For example, I believe that Jesus Christ was resurrected from the dead as specified in the New Testament, and yet I maintain that such an event is incomprehensible and entirely unintelligible to me. Yet it appears intelligent to me to believe in it because it resonates with my soul - there's no real rational reason for it.So any act which appears intelligent to you, must appear so for some reason, and by virtue of this reason the act is intelligible. — Metaphysician Undercover
It's unintelligible how the human mind skips the 99% of bad moves - without doing any calculation - and focuses on calculating just the 1% potentially useful moves. And yet, what the human mind does when it does this is intelligent - even though it appears foolish. — Agustino
Yes it appears intelligent to me because I think it is good, even though I can't specify how it is good. — Agustino
Not really. For example, I believe that Jesus Christ was resurrected from the dead as specified in the New Testament, and yet I maintain that such an event is incomprehensible and entirely unintelligible to me. Yet it appears intelligent to me to believe in it because it resonates with my soul - there's no real rational reason for it. — Agustino
>:O Yeah sure labelling it a certain name surely makes it intelligibleI don't believe this to be unintelligible, it's a matter of habituation. — Metaphysician Undercover
For example it leads to my spiritual well-being - but HOW it leads to my spiritual well-being remains mysterious. And I don't need to know HOW it leads to my spiritual well-being to know that it does.I think it is contradictory to say that an act, decision, or believe, appears intelligent, if there is absolutely no discernible reason for that act. On what basis would you say that it is an intelligent choice? — Metaphysician Undercover
But scholasticism has destroyed philosophy, and rendered it a vacuous masturbatory intellectual exercise. What use would anyone have for a Descartes? — Agustino
Yes he did bring an end to the scholasticism of men like Aquinas, however, he took philosophy away from ethical concerns, and down into scholastic concerns. Thus philosophy became a field for academics, rather than for those interested in practice.How are you using the word "scholasticism?" Descartes is often considered to have brought the death of that particular school of philosophy. — Thorongil
Indeed - there was a remnant of the Greeks left in the Middle Ages, which almost vanished after Descartes - except for a few exceptions like Schopenhauer, Nietzsche, and their ilk. But then they were always on the outskirts of Academia.The scholasticism of the Middle Ages was nothing like university philosophy in the modern period. — Thorongil
Intelligible on the other hand you could claim has - it follows a logical structure. — Agustino
Intelligible is something that makes sense according to the prevailing worldview/culture - in other words, an action that others can understand. — Agustino
Yes, and even more than that, in chess, and especially in reality, there's is no "best play". No series of moves that are guaranteed to win, no strategies that are guaranteed to win either, because things are always changing, and even an opponent's mistake may so alter the game that the initial plan/strategy can no longer succeed. Computation is a useful skill to have - being able to see a few moves ahead - since it's what it takes in order to be able to execute tactics. But if all you have is tactical capability, and little strategy, then it will all come to naught.It is impossible to "figure everything out" - especially in an inherently unpredictable world. And even in the highly regulated and predictable world of a board game, it is more efficient to limit your scope for mistakes. while attempting to force your opponent into a realm where there can only be "mistakes". — apokrisis
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