Notice what I said: it isn't a theorem. It's not giving a logical definition. — ssu
Turing Test is more like a loose description of what computers exhibiting human-like intelligence would be like. That's not a theorem, yet many people take it as the example when computers have human-like intelligence. — ssu
Turing himself thought that this would take about 200 years. — ssu
I believe that in about fifty years' time it will be possible, to programme computers, with a storage capacity of about 109, to make them play the imitation game so well that an average interrogator will not have more than 70 per cent chance of making the right identification after five minutes of questioning. — Alan Turing, Computing Machinery and Intelligence, 1950, p. 442
Simply put it: The Turing test isn't at all a theorem about consciousness. — ssu
Notice that OP was published five months before ChatGPT went live. — Wayfarer
ChatGPT has the largest take-up of any software release in history, it and other LLM's are inevitable aspects of techno-culture. It's what you use them for, and how, that matters. — Wayfarer
But we need to take a step back. First, it is true that Turing's writings have been interpreted differently and have conditioned an all too anthropomorphized field of computer development. For example, we refer to "intentions" when sending requests and talk about "neural networks" and "learning." Yet, in that famous article, Turing discusses the "Imitation Game," and he talks about "illusion". The goal is to delude the person being experimented on into believing they are talking to another human.
From a philosophical perspective, focusing on the illusionary part and not the intelligent one is intriguing. On this illusion, we have created a technological empire... — Pistilli
I said I would use explicitly rationality to try to get people to act in certain ways, rather htan moral reasoning. I am quite sure I fail constantly, lol. — AmadeusD
Therefore, progressives who have no compassion are fooling themselves. They're just trying to own the higher moral ground without the morality to go with it. — frank
It just seems odd to me, as if you're trying to "shut down" a conversation after the two relevant parties basically agreed it to have already been over. — Outlander
What country are you from that makes all the above disappear in favor of blind following toward a total stranger who just so happens to be in charge? I seriously need to know. — Outlander
It is also worth recognizing how much forethought has already gone into this decision on the part of Jamal and others. — Leontiskos
Rather than an argument against forming a UK company, this seems to be an argument against existing at all. — Jamal
Pure fantasy. — Jamal
I've done some research quickly on this topic.
[...]
I'm pretty confident it would be the same in the UK. — boethius
That paper is narrowly focused on a particular set of issues. The Metaphysics draws sharp differences between the ease with which we can observe kinds as a grouping in a system of classification and what might be an understanding how those species came into being. The many discussions concerning the "actual" in relation to the "potential;" are problems that cut across all enquiries of the nature of beings. The methods of analysis in the biological works are attempts to apply the ideas of causality developed in the Metaphysics to figure how particular beings come into being. — Paine
I'm not sure I would put it in just that way, but I don't disagree with you. It seems to me that the difficulty of characterising it shows that metaphysics is not a discipline or subject like any other. That's why, in my book, presenting actual metaphysical discussions is the best way of introducing it to people. — Ludwig V
In part 1 of this study, these questions are addressed via an examination of aspects of Aristotle’s zoological works, specifically his use of the logical terms genos (genus) and eidos (species) in those works, and his brief discussion (in the Metaphysics) of the male-female difference in relation to species definition. — From Aristotle to Contemporary Biological Classification: What Kind of Category is Sex?
When the sidebar is collapsed it's pretty distraction-free, no? — Jamal
Yes, I think so. That ability to collapse the sidebar is what I was thinking of. :up: — Leontiskos
If you're interested, the main software requirements to accommodate the new laws are more configuration, crucially including the configuration of the sign-up form, and more moderation tools, crucially including the flagging and moderation of direct messages. — Jamal
I notice you didn't wait for an answer and just went ahead and did it. So preoccupied with whether or not you could, you didn't stop for more than a moment to think if you should (to paraphrase Michael Crichton). — Jamal
The question is, how to make best use of the dump? What are other ideas? — Banno
3. Legal security: To make the forum legally secure and sustainable, in line with new UK online safety laws. — Jamal
But you can have a look at the archive site, built on a data export from a few days ago.
https://tpfarchive.com — Jamal
Because philosophy primarily speaks of things in generalities as well, but ignore that comment, i was just thinking aloud — ProtagoranSocratist
Yep, that's aristotle's book "metaphysics" in a nut shell, an early version of taxonomy in biology and chemistry classifications. — ProtagoranSocratist
Metaphysics is about the nature of reality. It's pretty simple. — frank
When people say "that's meta" in daily usage, they're usually talking about something in a philosophical sense...like the general characteristics, or the bigger narrative behind something. If that's what metaphysics are in philosophy, then metaphysics is a rendundant term. — ProtagoranSocratist
Thanks for your forensic analysis of my summary of anti-foundationalism. — Tom Storm
I’m arguing that in anti-foundationalism all justification occurs within our own systems, even for statements about justification itself. — Tom Storm
I may not have done much of a job of articulating this and have tried to be more precise as I go, But philosophy is Leontiskos interest and so he has more tools at his disposal. — Tom Storm
You can understand why people find theism attractive in all this, since it seems to effectively provide a grounding that resolves the confusions and tautologies created by anti-foundationalist views. — Tom Storm
Instead, it’s saying that whenever we justify something, we do it using the tools and standards we already have: and that’s true even for this statement itself. — Tom Storm
Thomas Nagel's 'The Last Word' is devoted to this topic. — Wayfarer
The situation here is like that in any other basic domain. First-order thoughts about its content—thoughts expressed in the object language—rise up again as the decisive factor in response to all second-order thoughts about their psychological character. They look back at the observer, so to speak. And those first-order thoughts aim to be valid without qualification, however much pluralism or even relativism may appear as part of their (objective) content. It is in that sense that ethics is one of the provinces of reason, if it is. That is why we can defend moral reason only by abandoning metatheory for substantive ethics. Only the intrinsic weight of first-order moral thinking can counter the doubts of subjectivism. (And the less its weight, the more plausible subjectivism becomes.) — Nagel, The Last Word, 125
Claims that something is without relativistic qualification true or false, right or wrong, good or bad, risk being derided as expressions of a parochial perspective or form of life—not as a preliminary to showing that they are mistaken whereas something else is right, but as a way of showing that nothing is right and that instead we are all expressing our personal or cultural points of view. The actual result has been a growth in the already extreme intellectual laziness of contemporary culture and the collapse of serious argument throughout the lower reaches of the humanities and social sciences, together with a refusal to take seriously, as anything other than first-person avowals, the objective arguments of others. — Nagel, The Last Word, 6
Here I am assuming I have avoided stating the relativist fallacy. — Tom Storm
Nothing we justify ever rises above our own ways of justifying and that includes this statement. — Tom Storm
How does "there is a truth claim that is not context dependent” not imply a view from nowhere, or sideways-on, or God’s-eye? — Joshs
I already agree with you that "Truth claims are always context dependent”’takes itself as a predicative assertion. The key word here is ‘always’, because it makes a claim to generality or universality. — Joshs
I am making a distinction which is invisible to you, probably similar to the distinction between ‘continuing to be the same’ and ‘continuing to be the same differently’. — Joshs
By contrast, relativist enaction is not attempting to represent anything. It is instead bringing something new into existence. While the foundationalist uses the representationalist nature of their ‘enactivism’ as a cudgel to coerce conformity to what is ‘true’ in a correspondence sense, the relativist can only invite others to see things in a new light. — Joshs
I am glad that the current pagination will be turned into a single document for the archives. The "Find in page" browser function will make searches one-stop shopping. — Paine
The seem to constitute the origin of acts. — AmadeusD
It makes me feel good (emotivism). Again, hard to explain that - but I think this answers the question you're asking. — AmadeusD
This is what I was getting at earlier - I don't. I try to get them to understand my reasoning. They might still morally disagree, but accept that, perhaps their act is likely to land them in prison, and so resile. That would be a result for me. Sometimes its fun to try to put the moral argument ot people, but its make me personally uncomfortable as I don't feel I have the right. These discussions are where I get most of my 'talk' out in the moral realm. It should also be clear that I only ever try to get people to either act or not act. I don't care much what their moral position is. — AmadeusD
As I understand it, this objection misunderstands the claim. Saying "truth claims are always context-dependent" is a way of describing how claims function within particular social, historical, and conceptual contexts. This description is itself situated and arises from those contexts. I'm, nto sure there's a contradiction in making this statement because it does not claim to exist outside or above context. The objection only seems persuasive if one assumes that all claims must be judged from a perspective beyond any context, but anti-foundationalism does not make that assumption. — Tom Storm
I agree with you that if the relativist-postmodernist is treating their assertion that “truth claims are always context dependent” as itself a truth claim, then they are attempting to achieve a view from nowhere. — Joshs
Enaction is speculative and experimental, not assertoric. — Joshs
When I then express this to you, I am reporting gmy experience as it renews itself moment to moment and extending an invitation to you to experience something similar. — Joshs
No, they are merely noting that no one has ever produced a context-independent truth claim. And that noting is itself not context-independent because it is made in relation to and within the context of human experience, language and judgement. — Janus
I personally find the "if but for" type of reasoning helpful here. "If but for the belief that negroes are inferior to whites, the defendant would not have carried out X, resulting in the wrongful death of a" — AmadeusD
The wrong-maker appears to be the thoughts. — AmadeusD
More-or-less correct, yes. I imagine there's edges to it, as there are with almost all claims to a moral system, that don't quite fit into a description of same, but yeah overall. — AmadeusD
No, not at all. If people resist my attempts to 'enforce' my moral take *on that specific thing that I have deemed action is required in response to* then that's fine, and I can't say they're 'wrong'. Just that they are counter to what I think is best. I don't think my wanting to take the action I feel is 'right' goes against accepting that it is subjective and i can't justify getting anyone else to agree with me (although, when they do, it's good. That might be harder to explain). My reasoning is what I am trying to get other people to assent to in those situations. — AmadeusD
That i personally would want to see X happen or not happen, and carry on my life under those beliefs doesn't seem to me to run into any obstacles insofar as claiming I don't impose on others.
Maybe there just needs to be a concession/caveat that carrying on ones life will implicitly, "accidentally" impose ones morals on those around them. I can accept that. But i active attempt not to do this, where ever there is no clear legal rights violation. Even some situations where there is, I don't feel that simply believing A or B is a better response gives me any truck in trying to get other people to do so. — AmadeusD
Mostly, but i don't equate evil and "absolute worst" in how i understand the terms. "evil" almost 100% of the time in modern english indicates some extreme moral wrong. For example, rarely does anyone say something like "that couger attacked the man on the hiking trail, that couger is evil!" because we all seem to assume that a couger cannot make moral decisions of right and wrong, but people use "evil" all the time to describe serial killers, politicians, and business men. While I don't like the term evil, I would have absolutely no problem with saying "Hitler, John Wayne Gacy, and Caligula acted in some of the absolute worst ways imaginable", but the thing i don't like about calling them evil is that we assume they could have acted in a different way with better morals, which is something I disagree with. — ProtagoranSocratist
I'm now getting dizzy with the curlicues of argument. — Tom Storm
But if you are speaking from a single context, and that single context does not encompass all contexts, then you are not permitted to make claims about all contexts. And yet you did.
You contradict yourself because you say something like, "Truth claims are always context dependent." This means, "Every truth claim, in every context, is context dependent." It is a claim that is supposed to be true in every context, and therefore it is not context dependent. If you want to avoid self-contradiction you would have to say something like, "Truth claims are sometimes context dependent." But that's obviously less than what you want to say. — Leontiskos
Being “bound by water” does not make the water invisible; — Tom Storm
The broader question to me seems to be, is anti-foundationalism a foundation? Is it a performative contradiction? I suspect it isn’t on the basis that anti-foundationalism is more a lens or a stance toward foundations than a foundation itself. It discourages the search for an ultimate grounding, but offers no ultimate principle to stand on. — Tom Storm
Without having the site do that, it is easily done by copy/pasting from the comment collection under one's name. — Paine
But saying “everything comes from social practices and chance factors” doesn’t mean we’reclaiming to stand outside of all that. — Tom Storm
There very well may be evil -- there are certainly things that are horrible or very bad. It doesn't take much effort to find these things, especially in human activity and behavior. Ideas themselves hardly fit the bill for being the absolute worst, because clearly people say and think a lot of things just as an emotional reaction, and emotional reactions are too pure for such heavy-handed blame and moralization implied when calling something "evil" in my opinion. — ProtagoranSocratist
You make a common enough criticism of Thompson's position (and I guess that of many pragmatists and post-modernists) and it is a good one. All I can say is I don’t see it as a contradiction, because I’m not claiming (nor would Thompson) to step outside all contexts while saying this. [...] So when I say truth claims are context-dependent, I’m also saying this one is too. That doesn’t make it collapse, it just admits that I’m part of the same situation I’m talking about. — Tom Storm
My understanding is that Thompson sees reason as emerging from our everyday experience and the ways we engage with the world, not from a detached, universal viewpoint. — Tom Storm
We develop our thinking through action, conversation, and the practices we inherit. He rejects the notion that this makes him a relativist: being aware that reasoning is 'situated' doesn’t mean all ideas are equally valid or that anything goes. — Tom Storm
Can you explain in simple terms why Thompson might be wrong? — Tom Storm
For me, personally, I find "evil" pretty empty. In terms of how personally arrange my moral judgments, yes. But I don't think this means much at all. It's just hte convenient semantic way I work out how I feel about things (or more properly, whether I should feel that/some way or not). An action which is aesthetically/prima facie disgustingly malicious and inhumane, let's say, whicih accurate reflects the actor's intention and ..i don't know.. world view? Could be considered evil to me. That's a practical notion, though, so I think I may not be saying what you're asking for unfortunately lol. — AmadeusD
Yes, definitely. I think this is one of the unsolvable problems of modern, pluralistic society. I, at least, remain humble in my moral positions and don't pretend that they need apply to anyone else. — AmadeusD
I will try to enforce mine where i am not obviously violating rights (which are a legal institution) — AmadeusD
But my Christian cultural heritage has instilled in me a conviction that reason is somehow knitted into the grand scheme, not that there aren’t also things beyond it. — Wayfarer
I'd probably share Evan Thompson's view that reason is situated, embodied, enactive and emerges from our lived, affective engagement with the world. Reason is not a detached faculty that can apprehend universal truths on its own; it’s shaped by biology, culture, experience. Truth claims therefore are always embedded in context, practice, and perspective. — Tom Storm
Truth claims therefore are always embedded in context, practice, and perspective. — Tom Storm
Maybe we could trial downvotes? They have a harsh side where immature people downvote to signal disagreement, but they can also be an effective means of community self moderation. — frank
We wouldn't allow a perfectly valid albeit controversial claim to be replied to with "Yeah, well, I don't like that idea", as if it contributes anything to logic or reason and human understanding—which it doesn't. So why allow it in the form of trivial, faceless "down votes" devoid of any reason or explanation? :chin: — Outlander
He's a white nationalist Christian fundamentalist who hates Jews. — RogueAI
I agree with Fetterman. There's been a strain of anti-Semitism on the Left for my whole life. People like Louis Farrakhan have been tolerated when they shouldn't have been. The Left is terrible about calling it out. — RogueAI
That being said, I always wonder why the right-wing, which is dominated by Christians who have traditionally been hostile to Jews, loves Israel so much. There's something nefarious about it: [ChatGPT content] Many Republicans—especially white evangelicals—support Israel because their end-times theology says Israel must exist and be defended for biblical prophecy to unfold. In this view, the return of Jews to Israel and Israel’s survival are prerequisites for the Second Coming. The motivation is religious prophecy, not affection for Jews. I wonder how prevalent that view is. — RogueAI
MAGA is extremely white-nationalist. Did you mention you don't live in America? — RogueAI
Well, that's what should have happened. What actually happened was Tucker fawned over Fuentes, and now Trump is coming to Tucker's rescue. There's an old saying: the fish rots from the head. — RogueAI
