Comments

  • Can we see the brain as an analogue computer?
    None. The TR-10 includes interchangeable plug-in components including coefficient setting potentiometers, integrator networks, function switches, comparators, function generators, reference panels, tie point panels, multipliers, and operational amplifiers, as described in the operations manual.

    Is there a point to this game or are you just going to indefinitely annoy me? You mentioned something in just the last post about confusion. Now suddenly you're rambling something about microprocessors and lecturing me on the thing I'm using to type messages at you.
    InPitzotl

    I am just trying to clarify the points that you have been throwing at me. No emotions here.

    Computers must have,

    the microprocessor
    input and out device
    storage device for very minimum for HW.

    For SW, it must have the OS for the central instruction processing and ROM (booting)

    And computers must be able to process data, and take new instructions via the programming languages.

    Now which analogue device is equipped with above components and capabilities?
  • Can we see the brain as an analogue computer?
    The biggest confusion here is your weird claim that to your knowledge there has never been an analog computer, followed by denying that what everyone else calls an analog computer is an analog computer. If that's the confusion you're talking about, I have another idea of how to resolve it.InPitzotl

    What microprocessor did TR-10 have? Which programming languages does it operate on?
    And what is the O/S for the TR-10?
  • Can we see the brain as an analogue computer?
    ..then all you're saying is you have not seen a square circle. So what?InPitzotl

    It is not as simple as that.

    The most significant difference between analogue device and computer is that, the computers have microprocessors equipped in. The processors have the pre-programmed instructions for processing the data. So, it is flexible and versatile. Computers can be interfaced with other specially designed interfaces to perform other myriad of functions too.

    Analogue devices don't have the microprocessors in them. They cannot process any data. They are purely mechanical in their design and structure, and cannot perform even 1% of what the modern digital computers can. They are data monitoring devices or receivers / players at best.
  • Can we see the brain as an analogue computer?
    The absolute best you could do with this argument is to argue that an analog computer doesn't match your definition of a computer, which is uninteresting.

    Per linguistic standards, insofar as your definition does not fit the established usage, its your definition that's wrong.
    InPitzotl

    Normally I go with the dictionary definitions on most concepts, but wiki? I don't trust wiki sorry.
    And in my profession, I have dealt with myriads of analogue devices, so I know exactly what they do, and are for. In real life and the world, they cannot be classed as computers.

    For computers, they must be able to store, retrieve, compute and search for data, and process them into useful and organised form of information. Analogue devices cannot do that from the limitation of their structure. OK, if you are desperate, you can call an ancient abacus a computer.

    But due to the misuse and widening of the concepts, you will find that the confusions will never go away in the discussions and even in real life. I try to narrow the concepts whenever possible.
  • Currently Reading
    Just picked up a copy of "Naming and Necessity" by Kripke.
  • Can we see the brain as an analogue computer?
    I could have been born in Curiocity myself!Prishon

    Thank you for being a patient and respectable dialectic interlocutor Prishon in this thread. From the dialectic process I have learnt something new today. It was cool. Never a waste of time. I salute ~
  • Can we see the brain as an analogue computer?
    For a decent definition of computer in modern times, computers must be able to store, search, compute, and recover data for its minimum functions. With analogue structure of the device, they cannot perform these functions in any practical ways.
  • Can we see the brain as an analogue computer?
    An analog(ue?) computer doesnt actually compute.Prishon

    Great point, mate. :up:
  • Can we see the brain as an analogue computer?
    There isn't any doubt about the existence of analogue computers, just try to read and understand what people are saying to you.Daemon

    I questioned until it was clear. I am still in denial of those old machines as computers, but did admit that someone went and wrote them into wiki.
    BTW, Your attitude is not philosophical, actually despicable. You don't allow people doubt and question on things which are murky in origin.
  • Can we see the brain as an analogue computer?
    Could you stop wasting everybody's time please?Daemon

    If you can't stand dialectics, then why are you here?
  • Can we see the brain as an analogue computer?
    The existence of analogue computers is already established a few times in this thread! This is one more:
    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Analog_computer
    Alkis Piskas

    That is for ANALOG Computing (an acronym for Atari Newsletter And Lots Of Games) . :D
    Atari is a company name, gone bust long time ago.

    Sorry for the sarcasm. OK, analogue computers existed in history. I admit that they existed. I was totally unaware of it. I learned something about computers. Cool. But are they relevant to human brains?
  • Can we see the brain as an analogue computer?
    And also tell us exactly what those analogue computers do, and the details of their capable functions in the real world.
  • Can we see the brain as an analogue computer?
    Which modern definition exactly? The most popular kind of computers are digital computers, but to say you have never heard of an analog computer in the history of human kind, where analog computer means digital computer, is a bit weird and meaningless. To "philosophically" only count a computer as a computer if it is a digital computer is a bit ridiculous.InPitzotl

    All computer is digital device by my 1st order definition.
    Give us your definition of what "analogue" and "computer" is.
  • Can we see the brain as an analogue computer?
    That would be changing the usage of terms. But that's not what's going on here. The TR-10 was commercially sold as an analog computer, as you can clearly see from the operator manual. That would make you the one changing the usage of the terms.InPitzotl

    It sounds like the time when nobody knew what computer was, or was for. Really it looks like too grossly far fetched definition of computer compared from the modern definition we are familiar with in any shape form or meanings. They might have written anything in their user manual, but that does not qualify as a formally acceptable meaningful term by the contemporary population or computer scientists or philosophers, just because someone written it and published into a wee leaflet.
  • Can we see the brain as an analogue computer?
    I was just making a comment about what you said! Dont you wanna continue? Are you offended that I said that computers can be analogue?Prishon

    No I am off to do some work now. Never get offended by philosophical discussions. I just present my views on the points, that is it. I could be wrong, then I stand to be corrected, and learn. If my point was meaningful to the others, that's cool. Nothing less or more than that. I will be back later when peace and quiet. :)
  • Can we see the brain as an analogue computer?
    You wrote (in last comments) what I was thinking. It seems hard to imagine that computers are only computers if bits are involved. Thanks again for your examples! Nice material. I wanna use them in a book. I never knew about these guys! Ive only seen one used in a chaotic drop experiment.Prishon

    cool mate. have a nice day :up:
  • Can we see the brain as an analogue computer?
    Ill think about it. Buon appetito!Prishon

    Thanks mate. The pizza was good. But seriously ...
    There are about 900 pages in my Oxford Handbook of Mind, and it weighs like a brick.
    So there must be loads of different theories in the Mind and Body topic, and it has been the hot topic ever since Philosophy began in ancient Greece.
    But my own point of view on the topic of why human mind cannot be seen as computers is this.

    Why human brains are not computers.

    1. Non replaceability for the uniqueness
    No technical perfection of replacing the matter in computers can render the uniqueness of the individual mind. There are billions of minds out there, but no mind is same with other minds. All minds are unique.
    You cannot build Prishon's mind no matter what you do in physics chemistry and computer technology. But a computer mind can be built to be exactly the same, and identical in every possible way by using the exact parts and components. So computers cannot be minds.

    2. Non revive-ability
    One's mind dies, it can never be revived. It is gone forever. Matter cannot replace the uniqueness of mind. But machines can be rebuilt, repaired and revived. Minds cannot. Therefore minds are not computers.

    3. Detectability
    No matter how human-like computers are created, and in action, it will be detected as machines by the real humans. There will be no human feelings between the machines and humans. Human consciousness evolves with time and interacts with the environments and situations. Machines lack that property. Well, one can argue, it will be developed into that level in the future, however, at present moment, it has not. Human mind is not a computer.
  • Can we see the brain as an analogue computer?
    This is a picture of an analog computer. More precisely, it's a picture of a picture of one; that picture being from the operating manual of a TR-10.InPitzotl

    Was it using the punch cards for the data storage? That is still bits. Maybe it was powered the analogue power, to denote electricity for the machine.

    I suppose you could call a horse cart as car, saying that it has wheels, moves and take you from A to B.
  • Can we see the brain as an analogue computer?
    Why is that not easy. I can simply say that there is some magical stuff inside matter that becomes our soul and feelings once inside us.Prishon

    Explain what is the content of the matter, and how is it non-physical.
    And elaborate why it should be the essence of human mind with evidence.
    I am away for lunch and some work, so my further replies will be later.
  • Can we see the brain as an analogue computer?
    Cant the essence be the non-physical content of matter?Prishon

    There are many different views on the question. Depends on what you believe, but it is not a simple to just say either this or that.
  • Can we see the brain as an analogue computer?
    Sorry, I'm lost. First you were saying to your knowledge there has never been an analog computer. Then I gave you a listing of them (a museum manifest), and you said those were not computers, "just" electric devices. I then linked you to wiki articles, and you mumbled something about teen nerds. So I said there's nothing debate... and that was your point?

    Do you have something interesting to say or not?
    InPitzotl

    If anyone comes with the picture of the old electronic analogue meters or vintage recording machines, and call them analogue computers, then no I have no comments further to make.
  • Can we see the brain as an analogue computer?
    The real entity? Whats that?Prishon

    The essence.
  • Can we see the brain as an analogue computer?
    Arent we made out of matter? Thats what you eat. You can say we evelved from some initial state of the universe and thede days we have an internal representation of the physical outside world. In this inside world things are going on like in the outsidde world. Im not saying we are matter only (I think thats what you mean by a machine). Matter has content.Prishon

    Sure but the fact that humans are made of matter, and the physical body is not enough argument to say the real entity of mind and souls are also the physical body and matter.
  • Can we see the brain as an analogue computer?
    There's nothing to debate here.InPitzotl

    That was my point mate.
  • Can we see the brain as an analogue computer?
    If you see machines as soulless things made by man, no they cant.Prishon

    You can see machines whatever you want, but human brains cannot be reduced to machines.
    And analogue computers? That is just another contradictory concept which not makes sense.

    Computers use "bits = 0 or 1" not continuos analogue voltages.
    All devices using analogue voltages are called appliances.
  • Can we see the brain as an analogue computer?

    Good examples not to trust everything you see on the internet sites.
    Could have been written by the teen nerds.
  • Can we see the brain as an analogue computer?
    For my reply to the OP, human brain cannot be reduced to machines, just because some machines are made to copy some of the functions of human brain.

    So, no we cannot see the human brain as computer.
  • Can we see the brain as an analogue computer?
    That depends on the people discussing... ☺Prishon

    I see them all the time :)
  • Can we see the brain as an analogue computer?
    The mentioned computers are no fiction. They are real computers but not conforming to the standard view on computers.Prishon

    I was not saying the device are fiction.
    I said the discussion will end up in fiction :D
  • Can we see the brain as an analogue computer?
    These ARE computers. Only non-digital. They conform to the definition of an analogue computer. True, they are non-digital? What do you expect as an answer?Prishon

    If definitions are too wide, then discussions end up science fiction.
  • Can we see the brain as an analogue computer?
    What about a record player vs compact disc player?Prishon

    They are just electrical devices, not computers.
  • Can we see the brain as an analogue computer?
    If a device is analogue, then it is not a computer.
  • Can we see the brain as an analogue computer?
    I am not sure if analogue computer has ever existed. Every computer ever existed in history is all digital from my knowledge.

    Can you list some examples of analogue computers? (if there had been any in real world)
  • Is agnosticism a better position than atheism?
    I feel that the OP definition is not the same as mine in agnostic.  I would have thought agnostic is for "not being sure", "don't know up to now", rather than impossible to know if God exists.

    Agnostics don't get into the logical trap, because their attitude is open, not decided and subject to further thoughts and investigations for the matter.  The logical argument on the atheists was my own logical reflection, which has nothing to do with agnosticism. I was not arguing from agnostic point of view at all, but it was just my own passing logical argument, and it has nothing to do with agnostic.

    Obviously the poster saying that agnostic is in logical trap is confused with the whole thing for some reason.

    Agnostic is a better position to be, because it is opening the possibility for further investigation and changing their views in the future depending on the personal experience, change of thoughts through reading and discussions, personal feelings and / or logical reflections on the topic.
  • Is agnosticism a better position than atheism?
    Clearly, Prishon, you have the same problem as Corvis.180 Proof

    It sounds like you are rejecting logical argument. Philosophy devoid of logic? cannot be philosophy.
  • "Kant's Transcendental Idealism" discussion and reading group
    I have forked off a thread for Kant's Critique here, as to avoid getting the two books tangled up in one thread.darthbarracuda

    A great idea. :up:
  • "The Critique of Pure Reason" discussion and reading group
    What does Kant mean here? This paragraph was very confusing to me.darthbarracuda

    This is what I think. When an arithmetic calculation is performed, the answer is not in the adding or subtracting numbers, but it comes from the intuition of the mind . IOW intuition must work to come up with the answer for arithmetic calculations, therefore it is a synthetic judgment process. One does not notice it when it is a simple calculation such as 1+1=2.  But when there are larger (complex) numbers such as 756 + 243 = 999, it is evident that, intuition is called for to come up with the answer.

    Geometry is based on the contradiction principle.  Contradiction principle says that, A cannot be "not A" .i.e. a circle cannot be "not circle", a triangle cannot be "not triangle", and geometrical items have their definitions already contained in the concepts. a triangle is a 3 sided polygon and the total of the 3x internally formed angle is 180 degrees.  The definition covers all the triangles in the universe. There is no triangle in the universe, which does not fall in the definition. If it doesn't then it is not a triangle. Therefore geometric judgments are analytical.