It's difficult to address a criticism which is just a slur.
Anyway, Kent doesn't like MW. His solution is to append some extra mathematical structure to QM in order to make it a single-world theory. He is thus an advocate of hidden variables. The trouble with this is that no hidden variable theory that does not contradict QM exists.
So, Kent advocates changing the physics, because he does not like the implication of currently known physics. — tom
As for polite discourse, perhaps you should tell that to, for instance, the Bangladeshis who have been hacked to death by Muslims for daring to blog (yes, blog) about topics which they find disagreeable. I am sure the machete-wielding mobs will be highly receptive to your pleas for a civil discussion. — Arkady
Why do you say that statement is contingently true? — Mongrel
A cool way to look at the impetus behind rigid designators (the answer to the question you asked is at the end:) — Mongrel
The importance of Kripke's intervention though (imo) has to do with the way in which he tackles questions of modality - that is, necessity and contingency with respecting to naming. For Kripke, a name is necessary - but this necessity is itself contingent (upon what he calls a primal baptism). It's no accident that Kripke more or less invented modal logic. It's where all the good stuff is. — StreetlightX
For whatever it's worth, I agree that I dislike burqas. I also disagree with general burqa bans (excepting particular circumstances such as driver's license photos, workplace dress rules, etc). I believe that people should be permitted to engage in foolish, demeaning behavior if they so choose, without laws preventing them from doing so (and no, I don't find the rhetoric of some apologists that the burqa is "liberating" for women to be persuasive: a prison is never liberating, even if said prison is made of cloth). — Arkady
Dworkin I know was against the idea of female superiority, but my point was that some radical feminists continue to believe that men ought to be exterminated, and are highly sex-negative. — darthbarracuda
What is the difference between "everyday feminism" and "radical feminism (radfem)"? — darthbarracuda
You think you have a void at the heart of things? Just wait! Once the Void Elect takes office you'll see a black hole enlarging from it's starting point at 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue. — Bitter Crank
Ah, so you can read. — Thorongil
Or chapters 5 and 6 of this book by Wallace: — tom
Wallace's strategy of axiomatizing a mathematically precise decision theory within a fuzzy Everettian quasiclassical ontology is incoherent. Moreover, Wallace's axioms are not constitutive of rationality either in Everettian quantum theory or in theories in which branchings and branch weights are precisely defined. In both cases, there exist coherent rational strategies that violate some of the axioms. — Adrian Kent
What might have been and what has been
Point to one end, which is always present.
Footfalls echo in the memory
Down the passage which we did not take
Towards the door we never opened
Into the rose-garden. — T S Eliot
From ~25mins for the purely QM stuff. — tom
Boy are you a cliche. Equate "conservative think tank" with "right wing extremism" and "racism," cite the SPLC, and play the Islamophobia card. Can I be sure I'm not talking to a robot?
I think her words in that interview were spot on and courageous. We're in real trouble if they now meet the standards for "controversy." — Thorongil
Despite the mis-representations of Timpson, the argument is not that parallel processing takes place therefore there are parallel universes, but precisely the opposite! — tom
The point is that the mathematics that we can perform - including proofs - is determined by the laws of physics. This also goes for the computations that any physical system can perform. This is why some functions are computable, but most are not.
Life is essentially a computational process, which you claim can not exist prior to mathematics. While it seems that the timeless truths and objects of mathematics must have always existed, I'm not convinced that they cannot be regarded as novel at the time of their discovery, or rather, invention. — tom
We always need to start with a putative computational model, a listing of states and their evolutions one is considering; and given such a model, it will precisely be logic (and mathematics) which will determine what could be computed by such a system and thus provides a limit. Physics provides no constraint at this stage. Physics only gets into the game afterwards, when we ask whether or not those states and evolutions can be physically realized. The mathematical (definitional) and the physical are very different kinds of constraints; but both are important. — Timpson
Deutsch’s emphasis on the possible physical existence of the universal computing machine, encapsulated in his Turing Principle, misrepresents its significance; missing the definitional role of determining the mathematical meaning of the evolution of physical states. — Timpson
You only need a quantum computer to simulate processes involving quantum coherence, so a laptop or something similar is all that is needed to exactly simulate consciousness. — tom
Imagine that there is some physical process P (for example, some quantum mechanical process) which would require a certain amount of communication or computational resources to be simulated classically. Call the classical simulation using these resources S. The simulation fallacy is to assume that because it requires these classical resources to simulate P using S, there are processes going on when P occurs which are physically equivalent to (are instantiations of) the processes that are involved in the simulation S itself (although these processes may be being instantiated using different properties in P). In particular, when P is going on, the thought is that there must be, at some level, physical processes involved in P which correspond concretely to the evolution of the classical resources in the simulation S. The fallacy is to read off features of the simulation as real features of the thing simulated.
A familiar example of the simulation fallacy is provided by Deutsch’s argument that Shor’s factoring algorithm supports an Everettian view of quantum mechanics (Deutsch, 1997, p. 217). The argument is that if factoring very large numbers would require greater computational resources than are contained in the visible universe, then how could such a process be possible unless one admits the existence of a very large number of (superposed) computations in Everettian parallel universes? A computation that would require a very large amount of resources if it were to be performed classically is explained as a process which consists of a very large number of classical computations. But of course, considered as an argument, this is fallacious. The fact that a very large amount of classical computation might be required to produce the same result as a quantum computation does not entail that the quantum computation consists of a large number of parallel classical computations. — Timpson
... I am using desire as synonymous to concern, with two sub-categories involved: needs (pressing desires) and wants (relaxed desires).
Pleasure is the experience we normally receive when we satisfy a desire....
But our brains were not meant to be stimulated like this — darthbarracuda
The author of the book I recommended is a philosopher. David Wallace works in the philosophy department of Oxford Uni. — tom
The algorithm may be ‘ad hoc, under-motivated, inherently approximate’, but it still allows predictions of stunning precision. Isn’t the point of science to make predictions? Why care about supposed ‘problems’ with a theory if it still generates predictions of this degree of accuracy?
But this misses the point of science...the purpose of scientific theories is not to predict the results of experiments: it is to describe, explain, and understand the world. And quantum mechanics—as described in the previous sections—fails to do this. No ‘description of the world’ is to be found in the quantum algorithm (p.25) of section 1.3. At best, we will find an approximately specified description of the macroscopic degrees of freedom. About the microscopic world, the algorithm is silent.
One robust response to my comments might be: so much the worse for what we thought science was for. Could it not be that our hopes of ‘describing, explaining and understanding the world’ turn out to be optimistic—even naive? Could quantum mechanics not be telling us to lower our sights, to be content with a more modest picture of science as a mere predictive tool? After all, ‘experiments’ can be construed quite broadly: the quantum algorithm suffices to predict all macroscopic phenomena. Why not be content with that? — David Wallace
I don't think it does. — jamalrob
Sorry I'm late to this party, been busy trying to write philosophy :)What is the world independent of us? — Marchesk
referring to multiple poems that were simply deleted by the moderators. In many of these threads I would rather post my opinion using poetry which expresses more than the stilted words of academics infamous for having an extremely poor and dry sense of humor and promoting western viewpoints by suppressing all others. — wuliheron
Klein, in his SEP article on skepticism, contends that the Dream argument conforms to the following schema:
1. If I know that p, then there are no genuine grounds for doubting that p.
2. U is a genuine ground for doubting that p.
3. Therefore, I do not know that p. — Klein, 2014, Skepticism, SEP — Aaron R
Is this position already known in the literature?
What do you think about it? — Babbeus
Ehmmmm I don't understand this "need" to have anyone agree with you. That seems to me to be the height of absurdity - going to a person, or talking with someone just so they agree with you, because, if you have any brain, chances are that you know they only agree for show. I've gone through life with most people - including my parents - always disagreeing with me. I never felt the need to have someone agree. I live my way - you have yours. — Agustino
And the voice said: Neither snow nor rain nor gloom
of night shall stay these couriers from the swift
completion of their appointed rounds. — Laurie Anderson
'Cause when love is gone, there's always justice.
And when justice is gone, there's always force.
And when force is gone, there's always Mom. Hi Mom! — Laurie Anderson
I agree Marchesk these are interesting cases relating to the issue of doubt. My feeling is though that they do not contradict what Wittgenstein was saying, though I haven't gone back to 'On Certainty' to check. I think the fundamental point remains that doubt can only rest on some certainties. The certainties these people with brain trauma accept are by 'objective' standards wrong, but those people still act on them. (Mostly: in some cases they seem to act on knowledge they avow that they don't consciously have)So in all those rather strong looking hinge cases, it is possible to have brain trauma so that you actually do doubt what seems to be undoubtable, in a real, every day lived sense. — Marchesk