A) Artificial intelligence can utilize any sensory device and use it to compute. If you understand this you can also compare it to human sensory experience. There is little difference. Can you understand that? — Josh Alfred
And yet, Josh (guessing) does not understand Sanskrit, and you do not understand understanding. A person who does not understand something does not understand it. I shouldn't need to be telling you this.When you experience through your senses you see, feel and hear. — Daemon
Your example isn't even an example of what you are claiming, unless you seriously expect me to believe that you believe persons with congenital analgesia cannot understand going to the store and getting bananas.I am not saying that experience is the explanation for understanding, I am saying that it is necessary for understanding.
To understand what "pain" means, for example, you need to have experienced pain. — Daemon
toI am not saying that experience is the explanation for understanding, I am saying that it is necessary for understanding.
To understand what "pain" means, for example, you need to have experienced pain. — Daemon
Your example isn't even an example of what you are claiming, unless you seriously expect me to believe that you believe persons with congenital analgesia cannot understand going to the store and getting bananas. — InPitzotl
Pain is a feeling. Shopping is an act.To understand shopping, you would need to have experienced shopping. — Daemon
Also, are you implying nobody knows what my question means unless they have bought me bananas? (Prior to which, they have not experienced buying me bananas?) — InPitzotl
Just a quick reminder... we're not talking about robots in general. We're talking about a robot that can manage to go to the store and get me some bananas.A robot is not an individual, an entity, an agent, a person. — Daemon
Okay, so let's be careful.Of course in everyday conversation we talk as though computers and robots were entities, but here we need to be more careful. — Daemon
To say that a robot is shopping is a category error. — Daemon
Imagine this theory. Shopping can only be done by girls. I say, that's utter nonsense. Shopping does not require being a girl; I'm a guy, and I can certainly pull it off. But the objection is raised that it's a category error to claim that a guy can shop; you could say that I am simulating shopping.You could say that the robot is simulating shopping. — Daemon
In a nutshell, yes. But again, to be clear, this does not stem from a principle that doing things is understanding. Rather, it's because this is precisely the type of task that requires understanding to do with any efficacy.Do you think the robot understands what it is doing? — Daemon
There is some kind of break and convergence between A) Being able to translate languages B) Understanding languages. I am not sure what those differences and similarities are, as I have never posited the two for comparison. Computers are capable of both. — Josh Alfred
My suggestion is that understanding something means relating it correctly to the world, which you know and can know only through experience — Daemon
Mary's deficit in the room is only that she hasn't seen red. Apart from that she is a normal experiencing human being.
A computer doesn't experience anything. All the information you and I have ever acquired has come from experience. — Daemon
As I tried to explain with Mary's room thought experiment, redness is just 750 nm (wavelength of red) in eye dialect. Just as you can't claim that you've learned anything new when the statement the burden of proof is translated in latin as onus probandi, you can't say that seeing red gives you any new information. — TheMadFool
What you've set out here is just one side of the disagreement about Mary's Room, but I am suggesting that not just red but everything you have learned comes from experience. Do you have a counter to that? — Daemon
Eyes do not perceive, so the answer to the question is no (I'm sure you didn't literally mean that eyes perceive, but you have to be specific here enough for me to know what you did mean).I recall mentioning this before but what is red? Isn't it just our eyes way of perceiving 750 nm of the visible spectrum of light? — TheMadFool
Imagine a test. There are various swatches within 0.1 units of each other from X=0.735, Y=0.265, Z=0; and this is mixed in with various swatches within 0.1 units from X=0.302, Y=0.692, Z=0.008. Jack, Jane, Joe, and a robot affixed with a colorimeter are tasked to sort the swatches of the former kind together and the swatches of the latter kind together into separate piles. Jack, Jane, and the robot would be able to pass this test. Joe will have some difficulty.A computer doesn't experience anything. All the information you and I have ever acquired has come from experience. — Daemon
Eyes do not perceive, so the answer to the question is no (I'm sure you didn't literally mean that eyes perceive, but you have to be specific here enough for me to know what you did mean).
Color vision in most humans is trichromatic; to such humans, 750nm light would affect the visual system in a particular way, that contrasts quite a bit from 550nm light. The tristimulus values for each would be X=0.735, Y=0.265, Z=0 and X=0.302, Y=0.692, Z=0.008 respectively. A protanope would be dichromatic; the protanope's visual system might have tristimulus values for each color as X=1.000, Y=0.000 and 550nm light as X=0.992, Y=0.008.
Assuming Jack is typical, Jane has an inverted spectrum, and Joe is a protanope, Jack and Jane agree 750nm light is red and 550nm light is green; and Joe doesn't quite get what the fuss is about. — InPitzotl
There's language translation, and there's wrong. What color is a polar bear, Santa's beard, and snow?Joe's knowledge that red is 750 nm, — TheMadFool
Your thought experiment is misguided. 7 is a number. Seven is another name for the number 7. But 7 aka seven is not a dwarf. There might be seven dwarves, but seven isn't a dwarf.If I say out loud to you "seven" and then follow that up by writing "7" and showing it to you, is there any difference insofar as the content of my spoken and written message is concerned? — TheMadFool
Seeing the actual color red is not equivalent to knowing the number 750nm. Colors are not wavelengths of light; wavelengths of light have color (if you isolate light to said wavelength photons and have enough to trigger color vision), but a wavelength of light and a color aren't the same thing. A polar bear is white, not red (except after a nice meal), despite his fur reflecting photons whose wavelength is 750nm. There's no such thing as a white photon. White is a color. Colors are not wavelengths of light.Likewise, seeing the actual color red is equivalent to knowing the number 750 (nm) - they're both the same thing and nothing new is learned by looking at a red object. — TheMadFool
It might work as a metaphor, but I wouldn't go further than that.Before we go any further, what do you think of the idea that perception is a language? — TheMadFool
It's not really the same thing, in short. Language does more than what perception does, and perception does more than what language does. They deserve different concepts. I don't think I want to elaborate here; I haven't bothered with the other thread yet (and once I do, I might just lurk, as I typically do way more often than comment).Why? — TheMadFool
It's not really the same thing, in short. Language does more than what perception does, and perception does more than what language does. They deserve different concepts. I don't think I want to elaborate here; I haven't bothered with the other thread yet (and once I do, I might just lurk, as I typically do way more often than comment). — InPitzotl
I think you're running down the garden path.I thought some examples of Gricean Implicature might amusingly illustrate what computers can't understand (and why) — Daemon
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