You have replied to me that your topic was a kind of answer to @TheMadFool about undestanding. This didn't change at all my wondering of how has the subject of "undestanding" in the title been replaced by the subject of "translation" in the description! But after this, I'll stop wondering! So, don't worry! :smile:What are you still wondering? — Daemon
Whether the world is as it appears to be is another (vast) question, and perhaps off topic for the Philosophy of Language forum — Daemon
That's interesting about Quine. How absolute is his scepticism about communication? — Daemon
My own provisional position is that when we say for example that a word or a sentence has or carries or conveys meaning, that is a metaphor, one we find difficult to rekognise as such. — Daemon
But you still think that propositions are special, — Daemon
. A. The councillors refused to allow the protestors to demonstrate, because they advocated violence.
B. The councillors refused to allow the protestors to demonstrate, because they feared violence.
A computer can't understand that "they" applies to the protestors in A. but the councillors in B, because it's not immersed in our complex world of experience. — Daemon
Some would say human language is a matter of rule following, but making sense of the above sentences seems to require experience with a point of view. — frank
Computers don't understand and humans do. Translation programs don't 'think'. — I like sushi
Can Computers Think?
The Turing Test, famously introduced in Alan Turing's paper "Computing Machinery and Intelligence" (Mind, 1950), was intended to show that there was no reason in principle why a computer could not think. Thirty years later, in "Minds, Brains, and Programs" (Behavioral and Brain Sciences, 1980), John Searle published a related thought-experiment, but aiming at almost exactly the opposite conclusion: that even a computer which passed the Turing Test could not genuinely be said to think. Since then both thought-experiments have been endlessly discussed in the philosophical literature, without any very decisive result. — Oxford University's Faculty of Philosophy
Computers don't understand and humans do. Translation programs don't 'think'.
— I like sushi
I Googled the phrase "Can computers think". I got 21,000 hits, including this, from Oxford University's Faculty of Philosophy (my italics):
Can Computers Think?
The Turing Test, famously introduced in Alan Turing's paper "Computing Machinery and Intelligence" (Mind, 1950), was intended to show that there was no reason in principle why a computer could not think. Thirty years later, in "Minds, Brains, and Programs" (Behavioral and Brain Sciences, 1980), John Searle published a related thought-experiment, but aiming at almost exactly the opposite conclusion: that even a computer which passed the Turing Test could not genuinely be said to think. Since then both thought-experiments have been endlessly discussed in the philosophical literature, without any very decisive result.
— Oxford University's Faculty of Philosophy
It seems it's still very much a live question. — Daemon
I can only suggest that you reread and ask yourself what you're referring to above^^ — I like sushi
If you can read into what I write something that explicitly isn't there then you probably don't get paid much for your work (or shouldn't) :D
Jibing aside; have fun I'm exiting :)
Any chance you could look at thread about 'Choice: The problem with power' and see if you can disagree with me or highlight something? — I like sushi
From what you said previously though, we can't know if we are asserting the same proposition? — Daemon
Yes. I don't think there's any logic that overcomes skepticism there, you just have to look at the cost of it: how much do you actually lose if you embrace that skepticism? — frank
You can't just pick and choose though, can you? I mean if the scepticism is justified, then it doesn't matter if you embrace it or not. — Daemon
matching linguistic symbols (words, spoken or written) to their respective referents
— TheMadFool
...and you were the one talking about CAT tools as if that had anything to do with referents.
There's a giant difference between responding to "Can you pick up some bananas from the store?" ...by showing me the phrase translated (poorly or greatly) to Dutch; and responding to "Can you pick up some bananas from the store?" ...by showing up on my doorstep with a bunch in your hand. — InPitzotl
What's the referent of "almost"? — Daemon
So for a computer to understand "almost" it has to somehow extract it from that load of drivel? Come on man. Do you think because you don't know anything about this, nobody else does either? — Daemon
A pattern (the referent) which we can extract from the following scenarios:
1. I tried to jump over the fence, my feet touched the top of the fence but I couldn't clear the fence.
2. Sarah tried eating the whole pie, she ate as much as she could but a small piece of it was left.
3. Stanley tried to run 14 km but he managed only 13.5 km, he had to give up because of a sprained ankle. — TheMadFool
Extracting "almost" from those three sentences is a good example of something a computer couldn't do! If you asked a human to identify what the sentences have in common, they might say "they are all about people trying and failing". There's no "mapping" from those sentences to the word "almost", even for us.
Your ideas are simplistic and naive. — Daemon
[results from] making explicit ordinarily implicit (i.e. unreflective) discursive uses, misuses and abuses of e.g. concepts, criteria, questions, problems, knowledge, etc. — 180 Proof
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