Is there still an experience associated with the pencil and paper calculation? Does the computation imagine the colors, sounds and smells of being outside? The sensation of freedom? — Marchesk
Is there an objective account of life? Can a "pencil and paper" be alive? — tom
How is the algorithm realised? i.e. turned into physical form? It requires an intepreter - otherwise it is just marks on paper — Wayfarer
The fact that the computer has a drastically more complex design does not make it anything more than a tool. — Cavacava
What is an algorithm computed by a processor? It's just shuffling around 1s and 0s, right? Or to be more precise, it's just moving electricity around. — Marchesk
Is a sufficiently sophisticated simulation of a living organism alive? — Marchesk
Computers [can] outstrip any philosopher or mathematician in marching mechanically through a programmed set of logical maneuvers, but this was only because philosophers and mathematicians — and the smallest child — were too smart for their intelligence to be invested in such maneuvers. The same goes for a dog. “It is much easier,” observed AI pioneer Terry Winograd, “to write a program to carry out abstruse formal operations than to capture the common sense of a dog.”
A dog knows, through its own sort of common sense, that it cannot leap over a house in order to reach its master. It presumably knows this as the directly given meaning of houses and leaps — a meaning it experiences all the way down into its muscles and bones. As for you and me, we know, perhaps without ever having thought about it, that a person cannot be in two places at once. We know (to extract a few examples from the literature of cognitive science) that there is no football stadium on the train to Seattle, that giraffes do not wear hats and underwear, and that a book can aid us in propping up a slide projector but a sirloin steak probably isn’t appropriate.
We could, of course, record any of these facts in a computer. The impossibility arises when we consider how to record and make accessible the entire, unsurveyable, and ill-defined body of common sense. We know all these things, not because our “random access memory” contains separate, atomic propositions bearing witness to every commonsensical fact (their number would be infinite), and not because we have ever stopped to deduce the truth from a few more general propositions (an adequate collection of such propositions isn’t possible even in principle). Our knowledge does not present itself in discrete, logically well-behaved chunks, nor is it contained within a neat deductive system. — Steve Talbott
We could, of course, record any of these facts in a computer. The impossibility arises when we consider how to record and make accessible the entire, unsurveyable, and ill-defined body of common sense. We know all these things, not because our “random access memory” contains separate, atomic propositions bearing witness to every commonsensical fact (their number would be infinite), and not because we have ever stopped to deduce the truth from a few more general propositions (an adequate collection of such propositions isn’t possible even in principle). Our knowledge does not present itself in discrete, logically well-behaved chunks, nor is it contained within a neat deductive system. — Wayfarer
A tempting answer is to say that the visual cortex of the brain generates color. But when the brain is examined, there is no color to be found there, of course. So where is that color experience taking place? — Marchesk
I agree, and that was Jaron Lanier's point to the functionalists who think that the mind can be computed, which is why he came up with a bizarre scenario of using a meteor shower instead of a billion Chinese to implement a digital simulation of a person. For functionalists, the substrate is immaterial, as long as it provides the functionality. — Marchesk
Is a meteor shower computationally universal? — tom
The brain doesn't generate color, it experiences color (or rather, your entire organism experiences color, since the brain does not function in isolation from the rest of the organism). It would be senseless to examine the brain looking for the experience of color - what would you expect to find? When you want to drive somewhere, do you just sit and stare at your car, expecting the driving to happen by and by? — SophistiCat
And so some physical systems have experiences, like my brain/body, and others don't, like my car (which could be smart and drive itself these days) or the rock I kicked.
That's why it remains problematic for physicalism. — Marchesk
Where is the problem? Some systems are cars and others are not. Is that a problem too? — SophistiCat
Physicalism can't explain why some physical systems have experience and others don't. You might ask so what, but physicalism is supposed to present a comprehensive ontology. It can't leave anything out and be true. — Marchesk
Which metaphysical view explains subjectivity? Actually, which other metaphysical view offers an explanation for anything? — tom
Physicalism can't explain why some physical systems have experience and others don't. — Marchesk
You might ask so what, but physicalism is supposed to present a comprehensive ontology. It can't leave anything out and be true. — Marchesk
But what color is the sky when nobody's looking? — Marchesk
Physicalism posits answers to certain specific questions, and that's it. — SophistiCat
Anyway, what question are you actually asking above? — SophistiCat
What sort of answer would you accept? — SophistiCat
Physicalism is an updated version of materialism, not the science of physics. It just says that everything is made up of whatever physics posits. Cars being made up of physical parts isn't an issue for materialists. But experience is problematic. — Marchesk
How experience is made up of physical stuff. Saying that meat experiences color, while cars don't because meat, isn't an answer. — Marchesk
An answer that would make the puzzlement go away — Marchesk
Why is experience problematic to physicalism? — SophistiCat
I mean, consciousness is a wondrous thing and it certainly has plenty to be puzzled about, but let me remind you again that physicalism isn't supposed to be an oracle that will answer all of your questions. — SophistiCat
But brains are not consciousness, brains are conscious [of stuff] - see the difference? It's not what the brains are made out of, it's what they do. — SophistiCat
I am afraid I still don't understand the reason behind the puzzlement. — SophistiCat
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