That's what mathematical proofs are, right?
You give it something, it does something with it, and then it gives you something back. — Michael
Do you actually have anything meaningful to say about the difference between humans and computers? — Michael
Humans give meaning to symbols, not the other way around. What a computer computers is only meaningful to the degree it's meaningful to us. We built them, after all. — Marchesk
And what makes that meaningful?
You're just reasserting the claim that humans can understand and computers can't. I want to know what evidence supports this claim. — Michael
You agreed that an abstract Turing machine can't compute grief. What makes an instantiated Turing machine different? — Marchesk
Is there something that an instantiated computer does with symbols that an abstraction doesn't?
Correct, abstract (and fictional people in stories) people don't actually grieve. — Michael
The computer is taking in symbols, manipulating those symbols, and outputting symbols, correct? So what's the difference between that and a human writing out the algorithm for computing grief? — Marchesk
The correct question is "what's the difference between a computer taking in, manipulating, and outputting symbols and a human taking in, manipulating, and outputting symbols?" It's the one I've asked you, and it's the one I'm still waiting an answer for. — Michael
Humans provide meanings to the symbols in the first place, which is what you're ignoring. — Marchesk
Which means what? — Michael
And what evidence shows that humans can provide meanings to the symbols but computers can't? — Michael
Searle's argument, as I understand it, is that computers (or any system) are unable to do this if all they're doing is manipulating symbols. Humans are doing something in addition when we produce symbols. It should be remembered that we evolved from creatures who at some point did not use symbols. — Marchesk
This sort of thing seems disingenuous -- if someone honestly claimed that if there was a computer designed to display 'it's raining' when water hits it, it thereby understood that it was raining whenever it was, it would seem to me he just doesn't know what 'understand' means. — The Great Whatever
Whatever it is, it is obviously not a mechanical response with an output such as "it's raining" upon feeling moisture. I take it we can agree that is not a serious hypothesis. — The Great Whatever
What exactly do you think grief is?
Perhaps the input to which "grief" is the output? And if we go with something like the James-Lange theory then the input is physiological arousal. — Michael
Grief is the input to which "grief" is the output? As in, the English word? What does that even mean? — The Great Whatever
How about this: grief is a feeling.
It means that if when presented with something I consider "I am grieving" to be the appropriate response then that thing is grief. — Michael
And feelings are? And what evidence shows that humans can have them but computers can't? — Michael
So people who don't speak English can't feel grief? — The Great Whatever
I understand what a feeling is better than what a symbol is. We think other people feel because we relate to them in certain ways, and we don't relate in those ways to computers.
Are you seriously claiming computers feel?
No. I didn't say that "I am grieving" is the only appropriate response. — Michael
I didn't say that. I'm asking what evidence shows that computers can't. Marchesk said that there is evidence. I think it's just dogma. — Michael
I understand what a feeling is better than what a symbol is. We think other people feel because we relate to them in certain ways, and we don't relate in those ways to computers.
Are you seriously claiming computers feel? — The Great Whatever
???
So what is grief then??? — The Great Whatever
The evidence is that they display none of the qualities that make us think people feel, such as rigorously inspiring empathy.
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