But she understands the sentences in the Martha-specific language which uses Chinese characters. Just as I understand the word "bite" in English. — Michael
Saying that Martha doesn't understand the sentences because she doesn't understand how to use them in the world is like saying that I don't understand the word "bite" because I don't understand how the French use it. — Michael
This seems question-begging. I just don't see how the Chinese Room demonstrates one way or the other that humans understand symbols in a different way than the aggregate of the system. Or if humans do understand symbols differently, why we should exclude the notion that a sophisticated system can also understand symbols, albeit differently. — Soylent
If we take a Wittgensteinian approach to language, knowing what a sentence means is knowing how to use that sentence — Michael
That's the question I asked. When it comes to maths, doesn't understanding consist in knowing how to manipulate the symbols, or at least knowing what to do with the input (e.g. plot a graph)? — Michael
When I was taught derivative functions I was taught to move the power to the left of the letter and then reduce the power by one such that x3 becomes 3x2 — Michael
Birth sucks, life sucks, we all know it. — The Great Whatever
My question wasn't about what Marx thought motivated everyone. My question was, "What happens to people who labor when machines take their place (when production is fully automated)? — Bitter Crank
And how does the alternative offer an explanation? Rather than just say "we experience X" the 'explanation' is "we experience X because something other than the experience happens". Is that really much of an explanation? Seems like a God-of-the-gaps.
And perhaps there is no explanation. Explanations must come to an end somewhere. So why not at the phenomenal? — Michael
The specialization and fragmentation of society is what we would expect under capitalism, and as all occupations become something which must produce goods or services which are marketable, everyone specializes into their niche. — Moliere
The explanation only matters to the extent that it provides useful predictions. It's a backformed validation. — Landru Guide Us
The "problems" are good things, not bad things, for science. — Landru Guide Us
But in any case, whether particles popped into existence or didn't isn't a philosophical issue; it's an empirical one. — Landru Guide Us
Relationships like e=mc2 are an expression of the functioning empirical world. To ask whether, for example, e=mc2 exists doesn't make sense. It's not a state of the world. — TheWillowOfDarkness
It's a statement that describes (and predicts) empirical phenomena. — Michael
Right, so as I said before you're adopting scientific realism. But the internal realist wouldn't adopt scientific realism. They'd adopt something like instrumentalism or model-dependent realism. — Michael
there is nothing about them that, in virtue of the books they've read and where they grew up, can possibly surprising about what they think or do. — The Great Whatever
The part that causally explains phenomena, yes. But in contrast to the metaphysical realist, the internal realist rejects the claim that any of the more meaningful things we talk about – "the chair exists", "the cat is on the mat", "e = mc2" etc. – say anything about these non-internal parts of the world. — Michael
Then you've begged the question and presupposed that the world of appearance is something like the mind-independent world. — Michael
In which case you can't make an argument that appearances depend on something else — Michael
That doesn't follow. That A depends on B is not that an understanding of A gives us an understanding of B. — Michael
It could be that whatever is in the vat is nothing like the brain as we understand it and that whatever this thing is in is nothing like a vat as we understand it. — Michael
If we're brains-in-a-vat then a theory "which meets all observational data and satisfies every theoretical constraint" might fail to say anything about the world outside the vat (which, according to realism, would be the real world). — Michael
If we're brains-in-a-vat — Michael
"The crucial point is that mind is dependent on a mind-independent world for realists, and as such, an ideal theory is constrained by a mind-independent world."
Yes, that seems like an accurate description of realism. — Michael
What I said was that the anti-realist will also say that an ideal theory is constrained by reality. — Michael
"Realism" and "real" mean different things. The realist is free to tell us what "realism" means but not what "real " means. — Michael
The realist doesn't have ownership over the word "real". "Reality" isn't realist terminology. It's English terminology. — Michael
