What happens next is that, because we talk to each other, we agree to use some of the same terms — Arcane Sandwich
But how do you agree to something unless a language is already up and running? — Clearbury
By the time we get to agree to things, we're already successfully communicating - and so don't actually need to agree to things.
In my example, no one agrees that S means "i am having experience P". I just use the sound in the hope that it will convey that meaning, and because the person I am uttering it to is disposed to beeive I am having experience P when I make sound S, the communication is successful. No agreement was needed or had. — Clearbury
Does that realization upset you somehow? I think it's marvelous. — Arcane Sandwich
Do you disagree with something i said? i am not clear what your point is — Clearbury
If not, then could you point me in the right direction, — Arcane Sandwich
I'm not a Wittgenstein expert, but he held that a private language is impossible and that languages depend on socially agreed upon rules.
I think that's wrong. — Clearbury
I don't think you are. — Clearbury
I don't see that it matters where or how a disposition arose, as that is not going to affect how effective it is at enabling communication between people. — Clearbury
Yes, you're derailing the thread in my view. Unless you can make a case for the falsity of something I said, then you're not engaging with me or the subject matter. — Clearbury
All that's required for a language is effective communication. — Clearbury
What's needed for a language, in my humble opinion, is:
1) A system of symbols,
2) Speakers who understand meanings, and
3) A mammalian brain (and a tongue, and ears, etc.).
Those are the things that are needed for a language. — Arcane Sandwich
False. I already told you what is required for a language. I already said it. Here goes: — Arcane Sandwich
That's not a case! You're just asserting things. — Clearbury
you owe an argument. — Clearbury
On the other hand, if you think artificial intelligences are real intelligences - so actually do have thoughts and other mental states - but they're just artificially created, then premise 1 is true, but premise 2 will then be false, for then why wouldn't communication be possible? — Clearbury
you owe a case. — Clearbury
Then what premise are you actually denying, mate? — Arcane Sandwich
As for the argument you presented, premise 1 is false, or at least it is false if by an 'artificial intelligence' you mean 'not a real intelligence, but something simulating one".
By hypothesis, a fake intelligence cannot understand anything or have any thoughts, as it has no mental states (only simulations of them). Thus, it cannot belief anything about what I meant to convey by making the sound 's'.
On the other hand, if you think artificial intelligences are real intelligences - so actually do have thoughts and other mental states - but they're just artificially created, then premise 1 is true, but premise 2 will then be false, for then why wouldn't communication be possible? — Clearbury
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