TheVeryIdea         
         
bongo fury         
         that a conscious entity had to construct the calculator — TheVeryIdea
someone had to read the result from the electronic calculator — TheVeryIdea
TheVeryIdea         
         
bongo fury         
         E.g. if I add 2 + 2 and get 4 then that is just a fact, a property of the universe — TheVeryIdea
bongo fury         
         But am I not interpreting marks on the paper or in my brain when I do the calculation without using a machine? — TheVeryIdea
TheVeryIdea         
         You and your brain interpreting the symbols is the independent fact, not the maths itself. I think. Quote specifically if I'm wrong on this point. — bongo fury
bongo fury         
         It seems that Searle is saying then that consciousness creates the independent fact — TheVeryIdea
which I suppose ties in with the quantum mechanics observation effect — TheVeryIdea
schopenhauer1         
         On the face of it this seems a strange distinction to me, am I correct in assuming that Searle's argument is based on the notion that a conscious entity had to construct the calculator and someone had to read the result from the electronic calculator so the result does not exist without an observer? — TheVeryIdea
RussellA         
         
Olivier5         
         
TheVeryIdea         
         He means that an abacus does not literally compute 2 + 2, or any other computation you use it for. Simply, if you code your 2+2 on the abacus the right way, and if you interpret the abacus' output the right way, you'll get 4. But the abacus itself doesn't interpret anything, or compute anything, it's just a piece of wood. — Olivier5
schopenhauer1         
         that does actually physically represent 2+2 — TheVeryIdea
Olivier5         
         Some information people would say there is mattering in what happens to matter. — schopenhauer1
Olivier5         
         the example of an abacus — TheVeryIdea
RussellA         
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