I see where you are going — schopenhauer1
Using the convention of "snow is white" is true IFF snow is white, perhaps one could say:
"the sky is blue" is synthetic, the sky is blue is a posteriori, "an X is NOT not X" is analytic and an X is NOT not X is a priori.
"The sky is blue" being synthetic brings in the debate between Indirect and Direct Realism — RussellA
massive amounts of information — schopenhauer1
I don't agree with you if you are saying, "Consciousness is something other than some inner phenomenological experience". — schopenhauer1
What do you want from me, in other words? — schopenhauer1
Now you are agreeing with me that it doesn't.This is the one. — schopenhauer1
you are obviously attributing consciousness to things that shouldn't be. — schopenhauer1
The trouble with this area of enquiry is that "consciousness" is used with such gay abandon. I've pointed out the several perfectly serviceable definitions of consciousness used by medical staff and taught in first aid courses. I should have given greater emphasis to the fact that these definitions cannot be applied to air conditioners and chatbots. — Banno
...what is at issue is not the status of ChatGPT, but the correct usage of "conscious". — Banno
...ooo I suspect the ideas therein are sitting quietly in the background, an un-noted stoa for various Green political movements and alternate economic theories.Small is Beautiful, by E F Schumacher... — Wayfarer
...has anyone here made use of Wolfram Language and/or Wolfram|Alpha? — Banno
What if we define a moral ought as something like “What all well informed, rational, people would advocate”? — Mark S
I might even say it is superficially analytic. — schopenhauer1
How do we know ChatGpt isn't conscious? — RogueAI
Do, you really want to turn this thread into a doctrinal debate between Scientism & Christianism? — Gnomon
There is a significant difference in cognitive abilities between them. — Pierre-Normand
How can a random process produce those results? — RogueAI
The value of this promise depends on how well we understand the supervenience relation itself. If it is a dangling, inexplicable, metaphysical fact that the Fs relate in this way to the Gs, then supervenience inherits rather than solves the problems of understanding the various areas. — supervenience
Indeed, I do not. I think you understand that a child knows its mother, without the child being able to provide a definition. Especially since you went on to talk of a further instance of understanding a concept without being able to provide a definition, this time from Russell.You may not believe me... — RussellA
You think it would be a good thing if ethics were based on faith and a social hierarchy? — praxis
analyticity in concepts. — RussellA
Thoughts and concepts stand in for words — RussellA
...supervene... — RussellA
Why? A child knows its mother, despite not being able to provide a definition. And so on for the vast majority of words. I think you are here just wrong.Communication using language would break down without definitions. — RussellA
Look up the definition of a word in the dictionary.
Then look up the definition of each of the words in that definition.
Iterate.
Given that there are a finite number of words in the dictionary, the process will eventually lead to repetition.
If one's goal were to understand a word, one might suppose that one must first understand the words in its definition. But this process is circular.
There must, therefore, be a way of understanding a word that is not given by providing its definition.
Now this seems quite obvious; and yet so many begin their discussion with "let's first define our terms". — Banno
Ironically, in my personal experience with an anti-catholic fundamentalist religion, the Catholic Bible was taken on faith as an accurate record of "God's Word". — Gnomon
Not much.What would say about a new religion... — Benj96
...would such a progression of linear time to a conscious being allow them to understand its infinite nature though not being able experience infinity itself due to their limited timespan — invicta
You might enjoy What's the big mystery about time?, in which that notion is taken to the cleaners.the two concepts of time and change are inseparable. — invicta
I'll take some small issue with this. Wittgenstein's private language is used to refer to supposedly private sensations, to that feeling you have when your blood pressure is high, to that pain. That's different to what is being described in your quote.It even appears that Chomsky is directly challenging Wittgenstein's concept of a private language. — schopenhauer1
