But there is this grey zone, and I take it this is where apo's grand synthesis lives, in which we consider what a possible natural world could be, and that means, to begin with, showing that the actual natural world can be described without remainder as such a world. — Srap Tasmaner
sometimes it does matter what the neurons of the defendant are doing — Isaac
"He cannot have intended to murder X because the neurons forming that intent were disrupted in their activities by a tumour" — Isaac
I don't think such a physical necessity matches they way we normally use 'intent'. It might show that there's no physical basis behind our word at all, but that's fine, I don't see there needs to be. — Isaac
..this represents a primitive form of intending... — Joshs
Again the intentional behaviour and language sits on and yet remains distinct from the physically causal description of events. — Banno
Again the intentional behaviour and language sits on and yet remains distinct from the physically causal description of events. As you say,
I don't think such a physical necessity matches they way we normally use 'intent'. It might show that there's no physical basis behind our word at all, but that's fine, I don't see there needs to be.
— Isaac
This view is in apparrent contrast to
..this represents a primitive form of intending...
— Joshs — Banno
On Bayesian Mechanics: A Physics of and by Beliefs
The aim of this paper is to introduce a field of study that has emerged over the last decade, called Bayesian mechanics. Bayesian mechanics is a probabilistic mechanics, comprising tools that enable us to model systems endowed with a particular partition (i.e., into particles), where the internal states (or the trajectories of internal states) of a particular system encode the parameters of beliefs about quantities that characterise the system. These tools allow us to write down mechanical theories for systems that look as if they are estimating posterior probability distributions over the causes of their sensory states, providing a formal language to model the constraints, forces, fields, and potentials that determine how the internal states of such systems move in a space of beliefs (i.e., on a statistical manifold).
https://arxiv.org/pdf/2205.11543.pdf
Just to be clear, I mention anomalous monism as an example of an approach that separates physical and intentional descriptions. Similar ideas are found in Anscombe, Midgley and others, variously articulated. The question is whether the separation is one of degree or of kind. — Banno
The question is whether the separation is one of degree or of kind. — Banno
seems to make use of Davidson and Anscombe's notion of intent being "under a description" rather than countering it or offering an alternative.“Some organisms also respond to some features of their environment in ways that support a distinction between merely taking them up, and taking them as relevant “under an aspect,” “as meant,” or “under a description,” such that they can mistake them.” — Joshs
For you, does intent enter at the level of molecular messages or symbolic representation in an organism? You seem to be implying both. — Banno
...as you really don’t get it — apokrisis
If what you are addressing is "how to resist entropification" then it is far from clear that you are addressing intent at all. You appear to think eliminative materialism or something similar has been demonstrated, confirmed. But that's not so. The discussion remains ongoing.
Are we on your view mistaken to talk in intentional terms? That would be quite an overreach. I'll leave you to it. — Banno
As usual, not one thing you say engages with the position I argue. — apokrisis
...The promise of progress, lost?If what you are addressing is "how to resist entropification" then it is far from clear that you are addressing intent at all. — Banno
and yet when I askedlife and mind are intentional right where organic chemistry starts. — apokrisis
you repliedwould attribute intent to dishbrain? — Banno
leaving me to conclude that being an organism was essential to having intent. Does it go all the way down to the chemical level, or begin at the level of an organism?it fails to be an organism in that it ain’t modelling its world in a proper semiotic fashion. — apokrisis
I'm not. Don't answer if you think I am.Stop trolling. — apokrisis
“Some organisms also respond to some features of their environment in ways that support a distinction between merely taking them up, and taking them as relevant “under an aspect,” “as meant,” or “under a description,” such that they can mistake them.”
— Joshs
seems to make use of Davidson and Anscombe's notion of intent being "under a description" rather than countering it or offering an alternative. — Banno
Perhaps intent goes all the way down to chemicals but culpability starts near viruses? — Banno
But more than that, there seems to me to be something peculiar in talking about the intent of chemicals. — Banno
Davidson’s distinction between ways the mind grabs onto the world in terms of non-propositional vs propositional, pre-conceptual vs conceptual meaning... — Joshs
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