In theory, machines can be made at least as semantically intelligent as a standard dumb human. — magritte
The reason why it is impossible to create a determinate language is that language is inherently something created by free willing beings. — Metaphysician Undercover
The problem though, is that many axioms are accepted on the basis of utility (pragmatism), not on the basis of being self-evident. This relates to Plato's "the good". This makes the belief itself the cause , as in teleology, but many do not believe that beliefs are causes. — Metaphysician Undercover
Premise 1 - language is created by humans
Premise 2 - humans have free will
Conclusion - humans cannot create a determinate language
IE, I agree with the conclusion - but it doesn't follow from its premises as given. — RussellA
For Plato, an extrinsic teleology, where the materials composing a body whilst necessary may not be sufficient for the body to act in a certain way. What is needed is an external Form of the Good in order to give the body purpose and reason (ie, the self-evident) — RussellA
For Aristotle, an intrinsic teleology, rejecting an external intelligence or god, where nature itself is the principle cause of change (ie, the pragmatic) — RussellA
For Plato, an extrinsic teleology, where the materials composing a body whilst necessary may not be sufficient for the body to act in a certain way. What is needed is an external Form of the Good in order to give the body purpose and reason (ie, the self-evident) — RussellA
Where does he claim the telos as the source of or navigator to truth — Gary M Washburn
The abstract perfection of language — Gary M Washburn
to show why any language produced by free willing beings will be indeterminate. — Metaphysician Undercover
I see an object emitting a wavelength of 640nm, and say "I see a red object". I see an object emitting a wavelength of 680nm, and say "I see a red object". Whether "I" have free will or not, my statement "I see a red object" is necessarily semantically indeterminate, in that I could be referring to any wavelength between 640 and 680nm. I could invent 40 new words to describe each wavelength in changes of 1nm wavelength, such as red650 meaning red of a wavelength of 650 nm. But I would still have the problem of describing each wavelength in changes of 0.1nm.
IE, the word "red" is inherently semantically indeterminate — RussellA
We can always manage somehow to be exactly as determinate as we need to. — Srap Tasmaner
what we mean when we say that two people have the same idea, — Srap Tasmaner
However, I can only distinguish between a wrench and a hammer if I first have the concepts of wrenchhood and hammerhood. — RussellA
"two aspects of language" — Srap Tasmaner
We are born with certain basic innate a priori concepts such as time, space, causation, colour, sound, etc — RussellA
Kant's "synthetic a priori" judgements gives an insight into the apparent circular problem of the fact that I am only able to recognize a wrench if I already know the concept of wrenchhood, yet I can only learn the concept of wrenchhood if I am able to recognize wrenches. — RussellA
We are born with certain basic innate a priori concepts such as time, space, causation, colour, sound, etc . During our lives, through regular observation and reasoning, we can combine these basic concepts into more complex concepts such as justice, buildings, tables, horses, etc. — RussellA
When looking at a set of shapes in the world, we are only able to recognize those parts of an object for which we already have innate a priori concepts. — RussellA
I see an object emitting a wavelength of 640nm, and say "I see a red object". I see an object emitting a wavelength of 680nm, and say "I see a red object". Whether "I" have free will or not, my statement "I see a red object" is necessarily semantically indeterminate, in that I could be referring to any wavelength between 640 and 680nm. — RussellA
Any person, with or without free-will, would fail in any attempt to discover an absolute and fixed meaning of any word using the dictionary, for example , in searching for the meaning of "object" . — RussellA
Argument four
Consider a group of people with or without free-will... — RussellA
The word as description falls into the same problem as using a dictionary. The word as reference falls into a different problem. — RussellA
Could we have evolved otherwise, maybe with no concept of space? — Srap Tasmaner
Seth's work at Sussex on perception — Isaac
The word "red" could only come to describe both of these objects if there is freedom of choice in usage. If there was no choice, "red" could only be used to refer to one or the other. — Metaphysician Undercover
a non-free willing being probably wouldn't even know how to relate to words. — Metaphysician Undercover
There couldn't even be any creating of new words because that would require choice. — Metaphysician Undercover
A non-free willing being would be so much different from a free willing being, that if one of them created words, the other would not even know how to relate to a word. — Metaphysician Undercover
Through a regularity of observation and reasoning, we combine these parts to create an understanding of more complex objects, such as a wrench, and more complex concepts, such as wrenchhood. — RussellA
Language must follow the same principle, in that we are born with a basic innate a priori linguistic knowledge. .Chomsky has argued that children are born in possession of an innate ability to comprehend language structures, where language acquisition occurs as a consequence of a child's capacity to recognize the underlying structure at the root of any language, as all human languages are built upon a common structural basis. — RussellA
As the basic concepts of language as representing the world is already innate a priori within the brain (having evolved over over millions of years) — RussellA
In a deterministic world where all events are completely determined by previously existing causes, when light anywhere between 640nm and 680nm is shone on a receptor of a machine, the machine can respond with the single output "red".
IE, a machine is able to give a single response covering a range of observations. — RussellA
In a deterministic world where all events are completely determined by previously existing causes, when light is shone on a receptor of machine A, and the frequency of the light is different to what has been observed by the machine before, the machine gives it a name - such as Frequency660, where the second part of the name is the frequency of the light in nm. When this name, Frequency660, is passed to machine B, machine B emits light of the same frequency contained within the second part of the name.
IE, if one machine creates a name, a different machine will be able to relate to that name. — RussellA
who decides how the machine is to be programmed? — Metaphysician Undercover
In a deterministic world where all events are completely determined by previously existing causes, the question is whether a simple machine can self-evolve into a complex machine without the help from any external intelligence. A machine is defined as an apparatus using mechanical power and having several parts, each with a definite function and together performing a particular task. Such machines would be deterministic, without free-will and without consciousness. — RussellA
Doesn't the theory of evolution require undetermined mutations? — Metaphysician Undercover
Science, if it's going to offer explanations, needs something to explain. — Srap Tasmaner
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