A play on words? — Don Wade
↪fishfry I don't see a philosophical computer as a hoax. Not sure I know what you mean otherwise. — Don Wade
Describe how you might program a computer, or robot, to philosophize, or mimic a philosopher - such that it would be able to fool a group of experts on a standardized test. — Don Wade
Good points! Ambiguity is part of philosophy. That's what seperates it from science. A pjilosophical computer would realize that and make use of it in debate. — Don Wade
And therein lies the misplaced belief about philosophy. Philosophy thrives in pointing out distinction, in defining a domain, in laying foundation, even in definition. Anyone who proclaims alignments and agreements in just about anything is probably lazy.A point of view may at first sound like a contradiction with another point of view. That in itself is part of philosophy until alignments can be made to show agreement. That's where discussion can help. — Don Wade
How well can anyone define truth in philosophy - yet we still search for it. — Don Wade
Searching for truth is not the same as defining truth. How can one search for something they can't define? — Don Wade
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