ou haven't escaped the fact that moral judgements begin with feelings — Isaac
Each time the text delivers that you should do X, your mind will deliver either a sense of agreement or a sense of dispute. — Isaac
Notwithsatnding the above, you still have to translate the words, sentences and paragraphs into some understanding in your mind as to what to do. — Isaac
You're assuming, without any justification offered, that the human mind is not itself a system. Simply because you don't fully know it's workings does not mean it is demonstrably not a fully complete system. — Isaac
I am opposed to emotional judgments in law. — alcontali
Religious people trust their scriptures. Therefore, this is not a problem. — alcontali
The system verifies if a particular behaviour is permissible or impermissible. So, it has only one predicate function: — alcontali
rather that the human mind cannot be just an axiomatic system, since the human mind does things that mechanical systems cannot do. — alcontali
It will be necessary to encode the text in formal language. — alcontali
"Additional value judgment" is exactly what we want to avoid.
I stick to the Church-Turing thesis in that regard. If there does not exist a purely mechanical procedure to verify a justification, then the statement being justified is not formal knowledge. — alcontali
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