I would say then that computers really can think, but I assume that I would be just confusing you.Why? What would that prove? — SophistiCat
Neither have you my post.You haven’t addressed the substance of my post. — Michael
Yet how the handle the data has to be in the algorithm. There surely can be feedback loops even in very simple computer programs, that in the old days were called cybernetic systems and there is a myriad of other ways how computers "learn" from the given data. Yet for that learning there has to be a specific algorithm.First of all, most computer programs are algorithms that process data, so it is not just an algorithm that you put in - it is algorithm plus data, and data can bring in potentially unlimited information. — SophistiCat
Again:What does it mean for an algorithm to tell a computer how to react? — Michael
My have to go soon to sleep.The children are waking so I have to close — Athena
That is in a way a totally different time and not only in Germany. Europeans hadn't seen a major war since the Napoleonic times nearly a century and the fact how lethal modern warfare had become wasn't understood.I have a very different understanding of Germany than you do. The book "The Anglo-German Problem" by Charles Sarolea is on line. It was written when Germany was mobilizing for the first world war. — Athena
Sorry Athena, I'm not sure what you imply here. Could you say it in another way?Instead of seeing me criticizing what is so, would you please interpret what I am saying as saying what is so and saying there are consequences to the change in education? — Athena
I think that you aren't grasping the fact that this is basic and a fundamental issue in Computer science and computational theory. An algorithm is simply a set of rules and a computer follows those rules. It's about logic. Period.And you don't think that we operate according to algorithms of our own, albeit ones that are a product of DNA-driven cell development rather than intelligent design? How exactly do you think the human brain works? Is our mind some mystical homunculus, operating with libertarian free will, and that can only occur naturally and never artificially? — Michael
Yes. And there's exactly the problem. Just from the Wikipedia link you gave me:↪ssu Have you not heard of machine learning? — Michael
Machine learning explores the study and construction of algorithms that can learn from and make predictions on data – such algorithms overcome following strictly static program instructions by making data-driven predictions or decisions, through building a model from sample inputs.
Yeah, but unlike computers which follow orders and basically use algorithms, we being conscious can look at those rules/algorithms and create something else, invent something, which wasn't in the rules/algorithm in the first place. When a computer "creates" something new, it has to have specific orders just how to do this.A computer simulation is just taking some input and applying the rules of a mathematical model, producing some output. The article I linked to explains that biological computers can do this. It's what makes them biological computers and not just ordinary proteins.
And we know that at least one biological organ is capable of giving rise to consciousness. — Michael
Actually, Trump tweeted that himself. Didn't find that on the NPR site now (perhaps in a radio broadcast?)No. NPR says rain meant he'd have to go by car instead of helicopter. — frank
At least he was still bitching about getting soaked at the later cemetary, so that's there to confirm that Trump didn't like being outdoors in the rain as the the Vanity fair scoop saidBut you said he didn't go because he didn't want to get his hair wet. That's fake news that you have now doubled down on with unenlightened along with you. — frank
. See here.One Republican briefed on the internal discussions said the real reason Trump did not want to go was because there would be no tent to stand under. “He was worried his hair was going to get messed up in the rain,” the source said
I think the basic problem is learning and the interaction with the World that isn't part of you. Too many times the focus is just on the very broadly defined physical mechanisms.This claim of multirealisabilty has in fact been deeply challenged by research into the biophysics of life over the past decade.
Everything biological hinges on the ability of informational mechanisms, like genes and neurons, to regulate entropic metabolic flows, like proton gradients and electron respiratory chains. So this biology, this set up, now seems so special, life and mind could only arise with very specific “hardware”.
This familiar assumption of cogsci, and hence 1980s philosophy of mind, now sounds horribly dated. — apokrisis
Well, that's what university history departments do. Not perhaps primary schools, but the highest learning does this. The focus on others and the negative impacts is so popular among historians that one should really put an effort on the bright side also, really. True objective history isn't pushing a political agenda, it's telling the past how it is and showing what was bad, but also what was good. Criticism is needed, but don't forget all the positive effects on others too! Perhaps the problem is that view too easily historians as pushing some agenda just with the topic they study.Our schools should teach our history and its effect on others. If the whole world acknowledged their wrongs and how their wrongs affected others, we might have a better human experience on this planet and change our consciousness in an important way. — Athena
I'm sure people remember what they did personally.Do they remember what they did to others? — Kippo
Only when it's beneficial for the capitalist. And countries aren't irrelevant of their national companies. Just look how many corporations are nationalized. The emergence of Sovereign Wealth Funds also shows this too.And capitalist concerns prefer to do away with national borders as much as possible. — Kippo
WHO thinks so?"National identity" has to be culturally imparted - history, myths, hurts, triumphs, strengths, and so forth. I can understand your confusion though because we tend to think that we as individuals have the national mythology embedded in us intrinsically — Kippo
I think the reasoning goes that when obvious institutional and legal discrimination, like women not being able to vote or homosexuality being illegal, is done away with (through universal suffrage and abolition of the sodomy laws etc.), then one can argue that you have equality on the legal/institutional level. However, this obviously doesn't mean that everything was great after women got to vote and homosexuals weren't put into jail or treated as mentally ill. Attitudes take more time to change. Yet one can make the argument that playing the victimhood card and arguing that one is being discriminated can go a little too far and that simply be employed as a political method.In regards to your questions, the lack of distinction given in the matter makes it impossible for me to imagine what Fukuyama is saying when he says marginalized groups are demanding more than equality. This is why I said in my first response to ssu that:
"What Fukuyama leaves out of this account is whether the demands to be treated equally were met. It also leaves out the unpleasant fact that a "celebration of intrinsic differences" is what the "dominant" group has been doing for centuries."
Where can I find this "broader society"? If the "marginalized group" is both an equal part of it and outside of it at the same time, this discussion of motives that Fukuyama embarks upon seems like a blame game about an invisible offense. — Valentinus
Yet you disregard the fact that most countries do have good relations with each other and conflicts are quite rare these days. If you argue that countries are competitors at the economic level because of capitalism, well, that's part of capitalism. And then you disregard the fact that countries prosper for mutual trade. Those countries that have closed their borders and think they don't need the outside World are dirt poor with huge problems. And that there are poorer nations and wealthier nations surely isn't a fault because nation states are formed based on nationationality. How a society works, how prosperous it is, how strong it's institutions are and how much social cohesion there is a result of a multitude of factors.Because the nation state tends to promote itself as a competitor with other nations. — Kippo
Partially? I think a racial minority that is discriminated wouldn't see it so lamely as you do. Or if you are dirt poor and I'm extremely rich, that class difference between us doesn't require a 'cultural context' given by somebody for us to notice the difference. That difference is evident in our everyday lives.People who make up "minorities" and " majorities" require a cultural context to be given to them in order for them to accept the classification. In order to accept belonging to some groups even. They have to be told that they are group X because of Y. This is not true of language, admittedly, whereby you automatically identify with those who speak your language. It is partially true though even for appearance — Kippo
So basically irrationality or what the number would be used here wasn't important. "Known in advance" is quite vague definition here. By whom? Someone who isn't good at math (then even a rational number makes it) or the a math-enthusiast who can use his brain as a calculator?I chose irrational expansions simply because they are more in the spirit of the experiment, as opposed to predictable, repeating, rational expansions that could be known in advance. But there are all kinds of mathematical entities that would suffice. — EnPassant
This is a bit confusing. How do you define these two to being "physical", yet then something being "mathematical" as opposition to the first?But if physical determinism is to obtain all the way through it must be shown how the value of the digit is determined by physical laws. But it is not. It is mathematically determined. — EnPassant
Lol. Yeah, and there's a huge difference campaign donors and outright and evident corruption of the Trump administration. Once Qatar bailed out Jared Kushner's familys investments at 666 5th Ave, magically Trump went from supporting the Qatari blockade to the totally different stance of being against the Saudi lead blockade. Btw. his cabinet had been thinking of being a neutral mediator between the Saudi coalition and Qatar, but Trump (or Jared) surprised every including the secretary of stat with their different views. Oh, it's just a matter of over 1 billion dollars or so.there´s a big difference between representing U.S. interests in the Gulf, like any other president has done before, and actually having your presidential campaign by dozens of donors from Qatar and Saudi Arabia like Clinton. — DiegoT
Good viewpoint.In other words, it's not just that the left abandoned economic problems in favor of identity-based ones, it's that neoliberalism has systematically defanged and deprived the people of the ability to intervene - and thus conduct politics - at the level of the economic. Having subject governments around the world to regulatory capture, while increasingly shifting decision making power away from the demos and into the hands of the already-powerful, identity politics is the only 'kind' of politics left that anyone can scrap over.
While it's easy to blame the left - and the right - for the turn to identity politics, this should also be coupled with the necessary question: what other options for political action are available, and more importantly, how viable are they? — StreetlightX
Um, who did Trump visit first when he got elected President? With Trump Saudi-Arabia got a far bigger friend than any Hillary administration ever would have been. They have played Trump's son-in-law like a fiddle. Actually Trump's other cabinet members tried to have the US to behave as it would have ordinarily done, but Trump sided with the Saudi's and created a bigger mess in the gulf.Hillary had the support of the Arabs, that are not better friends than Putin on his worst day. — DiegoT
Isn't that part of their identity then? Even if they don't actually like the country or it's government. (Who wouldn't be critical about his or her government.)Citizens in the relevant sense are members of a state or native or naturalized persons who owe allegiance to a government and are entitled to protection from it. — Terrapin Station
Question, Terrapin: what do you think citizenship is?No one is positing people not relating to the state in any way. Unless you think that the only way to relate to a state is via national identity. (In which case you'd need to present an argument for that.) — Terrapin Station
Now you are mixing up identity and how the people understanding what their identity is. As I said, many people don't give a damn because it's no problem to them.So, you don't think that people with no concept of national identity (it doesn't matter why exactly they wouldn't have that, it's simply a thought experiment scenario) would be interested in voting on laws about, say, health care, whether marijuana should be legal, whether taxes should be raised, etc.? — Terrapin Station
Perhaps you haven't thought this out.It just seems like a complete non-sequitur to me.
Imagine we have a nation state, and for whatever reason, there's some conceptual block where the citizenry have no notion of a unique ethnic or other cultural identity, etc. — Terrapin Station
Because if people don't relate to the state in any way, why would they vote? It's not their government, it's for somebody else.So, the claim is that just in case the above obtains, that nation state can't practice democracy, they can't all vote on the laws they'll institute, because . . . well, I have no idea why we'd think that, because it seems like a complete non-sequitur. What in the world does the one have to do with the other? — Terrapin Station
Give an example. Do you have in mind another way how people could identify with their nation or is the whole identity issue meaningless?Sure. That much is obvious. What's not obvious is the notion that you cannot have legimitate power and a democracy in a nation state without a national identity. — Terrapin Station
That's the problem. Vast majority of people don't have a problem for example with transgender people being treated equally, but many can get offended if one has to start referring themselves being of cis-gender because this rather small minority came up with the definition. And of course, everything concerning "white people" and the discourse goes quite nuclear, just like the debate about nuclear energy.The nice thing about this pair of terms is that there is a built in ambiguity that will lead to lots of disputes as to whether transgendered people, for instance, are asking to be merely equal to others or not. Maybe they are claiming to be more special than everybody else. If I assert the isothymia of white people, is that believable? Everybody knows that white people think they are superior. If you are against open borders you must be a white supremacist. (The Guardian carried a piece the other day in which the author equated the Republican Party with white supremacy.) Thymos = isothymia = megalothymia. — Bitter Crank
Thanks Bitter, nice to hear that from an old school Marxist. :wink:Why our hipster marxists can't understand the basic facts of class definition and class interest is beyond me. It is not that complicated. And their ignorance has led them to go in search of exotic and more interesting problems than those of people who are merely forced to work for a living. — Bitter Crank
Well, that may what I left out from the quote from Fukuyama. He acknowledges that these before invisible minorities did have success and they indeed had been repressed.What Fukuyama leaves out of this account is whether the demands to be treated equally were met. — Valentinus
Another fatal flaw committed by Fukuyama through assigning a divisive animus to all forms of self identification, per se, is that it provides no explanation why all forms of life protected by the Establishment of Religion clause have failed to destroy the country yet. The whole point of setting up a shared public space this way was in order to allow groups to withdraw from it as much as they like as long as those actions do not cancel the shared public space.
By Fukuyama's measure, there is no way to distinguish between the desire to be an Amish person and the desire to be a self identified Nazi. — Valentinus
Civil rights activists in the United States demanded that the country fulfill the promise of equality made in the Declaration of Independence and written into the U.S. Constitution after the Civil War. This was soon followed by the feminist movement, which similarly sought equal treatment for women, a cause that both stimulated and was shaped by a massive influx of women into the labor market. A parallel social revolution shattered traditional norms regarding sexuality and the family, and the environmental movement reshaped attitudes toward nature. Subsequent years would see new movements promoting the rights of the disabled, Native Americans, immigrants, gay men and women, and, eventually, transgender people. But even when laws changed to provide more opportunities and stronger legal protections to the marginalized, groups continued to differ from one another in their behavior, performance, wealth, traditions, and customs; bias and bigotry remained commonplace among individuals; and minorities continued to cope with the burdens of discrimination, prejudice, disrespect, and invisibility.
This presented each marginalized group with a choice: it could demand that society treat its members the same way it treated the members of dominant groups, or it could assert a separate identity for its members and demand respect for them as different from the mainstream society. Over time, the latter strategy tended to win out: the early civil rights movement of Martin Luther King, Jr., demanded that American society treat black people the way it treated white people. By the end of the 1960s, however, groups such as the Black Panthers and the Nation of Islam emerged and argued that black people had their own traditions and consciousness; in their view, black people needed to take pride in themselves for who they were and not heed what the broader society wanted them to be. The authentic inner selves of black Americans were not the same as those of white people, they argued; they were shaped by the unique experience of growing up black in a hostile society dominated by whites. That experience was defined by violence, racism, and denigration and could not be appreciated by people who grew up in different circumstances.
I think the link between a nation state and it's citizens, which then as citizens of that state do share a common identity, is rather obvious. Once that common identity is meaningless, you can have at worst a civil war. After all, how many in Jugoslavia believed in the 1990's that "they are, first and foremost, Jugoslavians"? Suddenly you were a Serb, a Slovenian, a Croat, a muslim Bosniak or an christian (Serbian) Bosniak. Not a Jugoslav citizen anymore.Does he give any indication of what the argument is for that claim? — Terrapin Station
Might be so. Nearly everything today has it's roots in the past and hence every topic or discourse can be argued that it's not anything new.It's wiser to read this as being more about a shift a la a statistical trend that's noticeable. — Terrapin Station
The only ones I can come up with that are truly bipartisan agendas for both parties are:Support him in measures that both Republicans and Democrats can agree on; come on, there must be a few items there — DiegoT
Unfortunately the Dems don't get this as they have the Russian assistance that Trump got as a figleaf. The assistance is btw is totally evident, but still...Trump is there becouse Hillary was worse, so bad in fact that even Dems didn´t like her. — DiegoT
So why then irrational numbers in the first place? Unknown in advance is quite a loose definition the way you say it.No. All that is required is that the digits are unknown in advance (to counter the argument for brain states making the choice.) I can say 'I will choose the 75th digit in the expansion of the square root of 7'. I then go and see what it is and act accordingly. In this way physical determinism has not made the choice, it has been replaced by mathematical determinism. Any physical determinism that would have made the choice is terminated at the point when the digit intervenes and makes the choice. — EnPassant
I think the number has to be transcendental, not algebraic and hence not just irrational. Then it Works, I assume. You see algebraic numbers are countable. The square root of two is irrational, yet it is a solution of the polynomial equation x2 − 2 = 0.Comments? — EnPassant
Nonsense (or was this a bit tongue in cheek, bitter?). Everywhere they have had such ludicrous policies they have only backfired creating a bigger mess. The simple answer is and has been everywhere: make people more affluent and they will have less children. That's it.Men and women should be encouraged (taxation, financial incentives, political reeducation camps in North Dakota, Mississippi, and West Virginia...) to have their single child while they are young and healthy. — Bitter Crank
I would say defending against an attacker is justified. War isn't anything glorious, but defending against an agressor it is justified and isn't a futile endeavour. As coming from a tiny and quite expendable country which got it's independence thanks to WW1 and barely avoided defeat, occupation and the Soviet dictatorship in WW2 my views perhaps are different from others.I suppose I'd say: War, though it is not glorious or something to be celebrated, is sometimes necessary. In what sense necessary? I don't believe I'd say even morally speaking. Or even ethically speaking. Only that we find ourselves at an impasse, and here it is we are now. I don't wish for it, and think it a good to avoid at most costs. But sometimes it seems to me that war cannot be avoided, because it would mean such and such for not just the people I love now, but forever the people I love into the future -- or, if not forever, then at least war for them. — Moliere
You mean early astronomy, right? I think something perfecting navigation isn't astrology. Astrology is when you measure celestial bodies to give political advice or similar forcasts, not things like maritime navigation.Astrology is not so bad; consider how people such as Newton, Copernicus or Tyco Brahe were accomplished astrologers, and they were great contributors to knowledge. - Astrology, like Economics, did a very good job for millennia of calculating the passing of comets, predicting eclipses, adjusting the calendar to the celestial motions, and perfecting navigation — DiegoT
