The end output is a bunch of symbols, which inherently is without value — NOS4A2
AI has one good effect, I think, in that it reveals how much we overvalue many services, economically speaking. There was a South Park episode about this. I can get quicker, cheaper, and better legal advice from an AI. I can get AI to design and code me an entire website. So in that sense it serves as a great reminder that many linguistic and symbolic pursuits are highly overrated, so-much-so that a piece of code could do it. — NOS4A2
I did, see above. — Lionino
If we can't voluntarily choose whether a piece of evidence is good or not, how can we be sure we're updating our hypotheses correctly? — RogueAI
Is it rational to hold an incorrect belief that helps you cope with pain and suffering? — Scarecow
However, atheism couldn't possibly gain you any divine favor, and therefore it is irrational to hold atheist beliefs. — Scarecow
At the very least, a century on, chemistry certainly has not been reduced — Count Timothy von Icarus
When I said "the physical sciences are less reductionist," I meant that they are far less inclined to think that the ontological reduction can be done by pointing to "basic" building blocks that define all plurality. — Count Timothy von Icarus
As Max Tegmark puts it, "everything can fit on a T-shirt." This is the opposite of smallism, the idea that all facts about larger things are fully explainable in terms of facts about smaller constituent parts — Count Timothy von Icarus
If you just have one entity, then process does all the explanatory lifting. — Count Timothy von Icarus
Whereas, it seems like reductionism is far less popular in the physical sciences, and this makes sense given they have very many good "top-down," explanations and because unifications—the explanation of disparate phenomena in terms of more general principles— seem to have been far more common over the last century than reductions. You can even see this in the goals of the fields. In physics, the goal is "grand unification," whereas in neuroscience the goal itself is generally seen as involving some sort of reduction. — Count Timothy von Icarus
All part of the materialist dogma, I'm afraid (one of whose leading exponents has recently begun to decompose.) — Wayfarer
E.g. the largest controversy ongoing in biology seems to largely center around concerns that "teleology" or something like it, cannot be allowed to gain a foothold — Count Timothy von Icarus
Yes, determinism doesn't necessarily prevent me from feeling pleasure or having meaning, but it also doesn't give me any say in the matter. — QuixoticAgnostic
There are two types of people; those who think people are always one type or another, and the rest of us. :wink: — unenlightened
Some empirical logics can only be understood by first understanding everything there is to know — Barkon
It's a statement referring to a logic. — Barkon