This appears to be begging the question, by presuming that the exercise of reason is something different than information processing occurring in our brains. — wonderer1
The general problem in the argument is framing things as True or Not True in relation to phenomenon instead of understanding it as an abstract game that helps guide us through ‘reality’ rather than something that is directly applicable to ‘reality’. — I like sushi
As a matter of definition physicalists claim that all events must have physical causes, and that therefore human thoughts can ultimately be explained in terms of material causes or physical events (such as neurochemical events in the brain) that are nonrational. In Lewis' terms, this would entail that our beliefs are a result of a physical chain of causes, not held as a result of insight into a ground-consequence relationship. — Wayfarer
A process of reasoning (P therefore Q) is rational only if the reasoner sees that Q follows from P, and accepts Q on that basis. Thus, reasoning is veridical only if it involves a specific kind of causality, namely, rational insight. — Wayfarer
Which question, exactly? It starts with the presumption that we can arrive at true beliefs through reasoned inference, and then asks what must be the case in order for this to be so. — Wayfarer
why wouldn't our ability to reason be advantageous for survival?...So the underlying issue here from Wayfarer perspective is that naturalism presupposes intentionality; our capacity for thoughts to be about stuff. How can physical things give rise to such thought? But isn't intentionality essentially about memory - our ability to observe things and recall them? — Tom Storm
The question we're faced with: is it impossible that conscious processes could evolve from natural causes? — Tom Storm
Do the outputs of ChatGPT have intentionality? Why or why not? — wonderer1
Verbatim!Question: In philosophy, 'intentionality' is the power of minds and mental states to be about, to represent, or to stand for, things, properties and states of affairs. Do AI systems such as ChatGPT possess this power?
ChatGPT: AI systems, including ChatGPT, do not possess intentionality in the same way that humans do. Intentionality is typically associated with consciousness and subjective experience, which are currently not attributes of AI systems.
While AI systems like ChatGPT can process and generate information about things, properties, and states of affairs, they do not possess a genuine understanding or subjective experience of the concepts they deal with. Their ability to represent and respond to information is based on statistical patterns learned from vast amounts of training data.
AI systems operate through algorithms and statistical models that enable them to process and generate text based on patterns in the data they were trained on. They don't possess personal goals, beliefs, desires, or subjective experiences. Their responses are determined by the patterns in the input they receive and the way they were trained, rather than by any internal mental states or subjective understanding.
While AI systems can be sophisticated in generating responses that appear intentional or meaningful, these responses are ultimately the result of complex computational processes rather than true intentionality.
In simple terms, if brain state = X, then mind state = Y is the claim right? If this can be confirmed through testing, then I would say this is a completely rational argument. — Philosophim
I interpreted this as suggesting that exercise of reason is assumed to be incompatible with the determinism of physics, when that is what your argument seeks to show. — wonderer1
I think consideration of the role of networks of neurons, and disregarding the molecular details on which the neurons supervene, is an appropriate level of looking at things for the purpose of this discussion — wonderer1
But classifying reason along with other traits - tentacles, claws, physical speed or strength - undermines the sovereignty, thus the credibility, of reason. Surely if reason is to have meaning, it has to be able to stand on it's own feet, so to speak. — Wayfarer
I think the nature of reason is tied up with the ability to abstract and to generalise, which is the basis of both language and logic. And I think the Greek philosophers realised this - you can see the origins of it in Parmenides and Plato and the discussions of forms and universals. That's a digression, but it's also part of the background of this argument. — Wayfarer
One could argue that the perspective of the subject (subject-hood, as distinct from subjectivity) is being re-introduced through phenomenology and embodied cognition (although It's still not considered in the kind of physicalism which this argument is addressing.) — Wayfarer
I am contemplating the idea that right from the very first life-forms, life *is* the earliest manifestation of intentionality. As the complexity of organisms evolves over the aeons, so too their intelligence, apparently arriving at h. sapiens, through which the whole process has become critically self-aware.
//we arrive at the ability to understand abstract truths and the like. They're not simply 'a product' of the human mind, although having such a mind, we can produce, e.g. imaginary number systems and the like. But I maintain the furniture of reason such as logical laws, are discovered not invented, and certainly are not the products of a biological process.// — Wayfarer
To respond in terms of the argument from reason, I would say that the brain-mind identity theory collapses or blurs the distinction between logical necessity and physical causation. — Wayfarer
On the TPF forum, this a no-win argument. Both Physicalists and Metaphysicalists typically agree on the details of physics, neuro-chemistry, and cosmology all the way back to the rationally-inferred Big Bang, but disagree on the metaphysical question of direction vs randomness.The argument from reason challenges the proposition that everything that exists, and in particular thought and reason, can be explained solely in terms of natural or physical processes. It is, therefore, an argument against materialist philosophy of mind. According to the argument, if such theories were true, our thoughts, and so also our reasoning, would be determined on the molecular level by neurochemistry, leaving no role for the free exercise of reason. — Wayfarer
Is the universe a self-organizing self-learning Program*1, or a random sequence of accidents that over eons has stumbled upon a formula to cause a few constellations of atoms to imagine that they exist, simply because they can think. What do you think? — Gnomon
Logical necessity never holds between one belief state and another; it only holds between the contents of one belief state and the contents
of another. — Srap Tasmaner
That's why you need an actual argument showing that.... — Srap Tasmaner
I don't see how reason needs to have transcendent meaning. — Tom Storm
On the TPF forum, this a no-win argument. — Gnomon
I guess your project is a form of Platonism, — Tom Storm
Ontological question: Is the universe a self-organizing self-learning Program*2, or a random sequence of accidents that over eons has stumbled upon a formula to cause a few constellations of atoms to imagine that they exist, simply because they can think. What do you think? — Gnomon
The argument from reason is very much a transcendental argument. — Wayfarer
Lloyd Gleeson — Wayfarer
it delineates the specific questions and subject matter unique to philosophy as distinct from natural science. — Wayfarer
Lloyd Gleeson, who is one of the leading academics in this area, says in his most recent book Platonism vs Naturalism, that Platonism is philosophy, in that it delineates the specific questions and subject matter unique to philosophy as distinct from natural science. I don't expect that will win anyone over, though ;-) (See Edward Feser, Join the Ur-Platonist Alliance!) — Wayfarer
Do you mean Lloyd Gerson? — Tom Storm
Aristotle, in De Anima, argued that thinking in general (which includes knowledge as one kind of thinking) cannot be a property of a body; it cannot, as he put it, 'be blended with a body'. This is because in thinking, the intelligible object or form is present in the intellect, and thinking itself is the identification of the intellect with this intelligible. Among other things, this means that you could not think if materialism is true… . Thinking is not something that is, in principle, like sensing or perceiving; this is because thinking is a universalising activity. This is what this means: when you think, you see - mentally see - a form which could not, in principle, be identical with a particular - including a particular neurological element, a circuit, or a state of a circuit, or a synapse, and so on. This is so because the object of thinking is universal, or the mind is operating universally.
….the fact that in thinking, your mind is identical with the form that it thinks, means (for Aristotle and for all Platonists) that since the form 'thought' is detached from matter, 'mind' is immaterial too. — Lloyd Gerson
but really got a lot from a lecture of which I also have the hard copy. I have this quotation in my scrapbook: — Wayfarer
Overturning Platonism, then, means denying the primacy of original over copy, of model over image; glorifying the reign of simulacra and reflections.” (Difference and Repetition) — Joshs
Question: In philosophy, 'intentionality' is the power of minds and mental states to be about, to represent, or to stand for, things, properties and states of affairs. Do AI systems such as ChatGPT possess this power?
ChatGPT: AI systems, including ChatGPT, do not possess intentionality in the same way that humans do. Intentionality is typically associated with consciousness and subjective experience, which are currently not attributes of AI systems.
Overturning Platonism, then, means denying the primacy of original over copy, of model over image; glorifying the reign of simulacra and reflections.” (Difference and Repetition)
— Joshs
That's an interesting call to arms but I guess it's hard for most of us to apprehend how we can do this? Is it an act of will? Pardon my literalism but in glorifying the reign of simulacra, does my Picasso print become equal to the one hanging in the museum — Tom Storm
Which of course any well informed materialist would agree with — wonderer1
there is no such thing as an original — Joshs
Ever see Orson Wells’ film ‘F for Fake’? — Joshs
Also, you didn't ask ChatGPT the question I proposed which was, "Do the outputs of ChatGPT have intentionality?" — wonderer1
Do the outputs of ChatGPT have intentionality?
ChatGPT: No, the outputs of ChatGPT do not have intentionality. ChatGPT is a language model that generates responses based on patterns it has learned from the training data. It does not possess consciousness or subjective experiences, and its responses are not driven by internal goals or intentions. ChatGPT generates text based on statistical patterns and associations in the training data and attempts to provide coherent and relevant responses to the input it receives.
Do animals have intentionality? They seem to from my perspective. What does this add to the discussion? — Tom Storm
But forgery and fakery are only possible if there is an original - so how does this all work? — Tom Storm
The SEP entry would be a good starting point https://plato.stanford.edu/entries/intentionalitypeople have widely varying concepts in mind when using the word "intentionality" — wonderer1
OK then, give us a well-informed materialists' account of the significance of intentionality. — Wayfarer
As for whether output - written text - has any kind of ‘intentionality’, I would say, clearly not. Written text means nothing without being interpreted.
The SEP entry would be a good starting point https://plato.stanford.edu/entries/intentionality — Wayfarer
But while there may be correlations between mental states and brain states, this doesn't necessarily imply a strict identity between them. — Wayfarer
Logical propositions and their truth values are abstract entities that exist independently of any specific physical realization, such as brain states. — Wayfarer
I could choose to represent it and any number of different propositions in different symbolic systems and different media, whilst still preserving the logic. — Wayfarer
I think consideration of the role of networks of neurons, and disregarding the molecular details on which the neurons supervene, is an appropriate level of looking at things for the purpose of this discussion
— wonderer1
It might be, were this a computer science or neuroscience forum. — Wayfarer
Are the countless neuroscience discoveries, medicine, psychiatrics, etc. all just correlations? Of course not. — Philosophim
We're in philosophy. — Philosophim
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