One puzzle may be that in Wittgenstein meaning is pretty much replaced by use in a form of life; that is, it is not to be separated from the everyday activities in which you and I engage. But arguably that is what Google does in abstracting a vector representation of a word. — Banno
It will be interesting to see how the divide between Chomski and Bengio plays out - the link in your cited article is unfortunately broken. — Banno
The link in the OP is for paid membership, — Shawn
but deep learning pioneer Yoshua Bengio has noted that deep learning so far entirely contradicts these theories.
Oh, and the Chineses Room - Google might be showing how the room could be constricted without a rule book... showing that Searle's basic insight, that language use is not syntactic, is correct, but without dismissing machine intelligence. — Banno
Searle used the Chinese room to argue that there was more to meaning than could be captured by mere semantics. — Banno
I wish I could locate the youtube footage of Searle's wry account of early replies to his vivid demonstration (the chinese room) that so-called "cognitive scripts" mistook syntax for semantics. Something like, "so they said, ok we'll program the semantics into it too, but of course what they came back with was just more syntax". — bongo fury
I was wondering if Google utilizes meaning as use, given their enormous knowledge about how language is utilized by its users — Shawn
But arguably that is what Google does in abstracting a vector representation of a word. — Banno
Searle used the Chinese room to argue that there was more to meaning than could be captured by mere syntax. A bloke in a room with a book of rules that could translate any piece of Chinese text into English does not understand Chinese.
Does Google Translate understand Chinese? — Banno
Google doesn't store vector representations of words in isolation but rather in their semantic context. — Kenosha Kid
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.