Ok. Granted. What does it have to do with bedrock belief? — creativesoul
Is that an official academic criterion/standard/definition from an otherwise reputable institution of knowledge? — creativesoul
https://people.math.umass.edu/~lavine/Book/book.pdfDefinition 2.1 (Statistic). A statistic is any function, possibly vector valued, of the data. — link
throwing Sartor Resartus into the mix for good measure — Pantagruel
Ramsey. Worth a whole thread. My gut says that neurone don't represent stuff as percentages - amy more than gasses do - but that we can describe what they are doing in terms of percentages - like we do with the temperature of a gas; and further that while beliefs can be put into percentages that's not their "real" nature. — Banno
Seems to me that you are doing it wrong, then. Being embodied means being open to the slings and arrows. That's what it is to be who you are. — Banno
An honest philosopher always dialogues with his rivals, concedes their points and tries to criticise his thesis with the same rigour as those of others. — David Mo
Well, you were basically objecting to Descartes before in the context of his cogito argument. I did a climb down and agreed with you that an "I" is, perhaps, too complex an entity to be inferred merely from thought. In what sense is my "thinker", here merely an entity whose function is thought, inappropriate? — TheMadFool
I don’t mean “rhetorical” in a sense that implies sophistry or opposes dialectic. I just mean it as in caring about the style and presentation and other non-rational aspects of communication, above and beyond just being technically correct in your logic. To quote myself: — Pfhorrest
I don’t mean to suggest we turn away from “cosmic enigmas”, just that we don’t mistake our own confusion for those profound depths in need of plunging. — Pfhorrest
Wittgenstein, Heidegger, and Dewey are in agreement that the notion of knowledge of accurate representation, made possible by special mental processes, and intelligible through a general theory of representation, needs to be abandoned. For all three, the notions of "foundations of knowledge" and of philosophy as revolving around the Cartesian attempt to answer the epistemological skeptic are set aside. Further, they set aside the notion of "the mind" common to Descartes, Locke, and Kant — as a special subject of study, located in inner space, containing elements or processes which make knowledge possible. This is not to say that they have alternative "theories of knowledge" or "philosophies of mind." They set aside epistemology and metaphysics as possible disciplines. I say "set aside" rather than "argue against" because their attitude toward the traditional problematic is like the attitude of seventeenth century philosophers toward the scholastic problematic. They do not devote themselves to discovering false propositions or bad arguments in the works of their predecessors (though they occasionally do that too). Rather, they glimpse the possibility of a form of intellectual life in which the vocabulary of philosophical reflection inherited from the seventeenth century would seem as pointless as the thirteenth-century philosophical vocabulary had seemed to the Enlightenment. To assert the possibility of a post-Kantian culture, one in which there is no all-encompassing discipline which legitimizes or grounds the others, is not necessarily to argue against any particular Kantian doctrine, any more than to glimpse the possibility of a culture in which religion either did not exist, or had no connection with science or politics, was necessarily to argue against Aquinas's claim that God's existence can be proved by natural reason. Wittgenstein, Heidegger, and Dewey have brought us into a period of "revolutionary" philosophy (in the sense of Kuhn's "revolutionary" science) by introducing new maps of the terrain (viz., of the whole panorama of human activities) which simply do not include those features which previously seemed to dominate. — Rorty
I agree that most of what we would consider "sedimentation" or paradigm fixing is cultural, but perhaps there are also biological sedimentations that are much deeper layers and impossible or almost impossible to shift. — Janus
What does that mean? Is it not your face? If so, how can an image of your face represent a ghost who was never born? Or if it is someone else's face then ditto? Time to show the beetle in your box, I think. — Janus
It's known as perceived entitivity. People act in such a way as to conform to the typical behaviour of the social group to which they wish to belong (not necessarily the one to which they actually do belong by practical entitivity). — Isaac
What did you understand by "thinker" in my last reply to you? — TheMadFool
but I'm a psychologist, I think practically everything comes down to social acceptance!
...
I'm trying to look at the sentence "chairs are physical objects" in the same terms as we looked at "meet me by the tree", what is it trying to do. I think the answer to that is that it is trying to get the listener to take the chair as relatively indisputable. — Isaac
Oh, and on the subject neural underpinnings, you might be interested to know that there's a response in the brain called a p600 effect (not important why), it alerts us to novelty in various processes. It's active when we process sentences of ambiguous meaning. It completely inactive when we don't. I just thought it might be of interest given your conversation with Banno (which was a good read, by the way). We really do, it seems, have whole sentences and responses which are processed almost on autopilot, only being flagged occasionally when something novel turns up. — Isaac
Our cognition is far greater than the wetware, but extends out to the things around us. My thoughts become clearer as as I write this; the keyboard forms part of my thinking. Watch someone using an abacus. Further, this conversation is part of our cognition.
Moreover, consciousness is consciousness of something. Hence it extends outside our bodies. — Banno
So... philosophy is just iteratively moving in the direction of steepest descent as defined by the negative of the gradient, by taking steps proportional to the negative of the gradient of the function at the current point. Done by humans or software, makes no nevermind. — Banno
The purpose of the sentence is to say get the other person to be at some place I have in mind. If it does that then who cares what 'tree' means? It just has to be close enough to something we're both going to respond to in the same way. — Isaac
If this is the case (and I'm very much inclined to agree with you), then would it not be more likely that there is no such thing as what a word means... Rather than that such a thing exists but we don't know what it is? — Isaac
If that (your post) were the result, then so what? — Banno
Would I have had the same response? I suspect not. — Banno
hat have long since already been in use prior to becoming a user. — creativesoul
The world is already meaningful. — creativesoul
Indeed; and although statistical analysis feels like winning Turing's test by cheating...
If that were the result, then so what? Googles's statistical translations are, after all, translations. — Banno
If this were written by a synthetic conversation partner... Well, that would be astonishing. If ModBot has progresses this far - well, I would be genuinely nonplussed.
But then, perhaps such an eventuality is inevitable. — Banno
We all adopt our first worldview.
We're thrown into the world in this way. — creativesoul
That passed.
Who wins? — creativesoul
Oh, I want Path to win. Especially if she is a bot. But you should not take that personally.
It would just be so very cool. — Banno
I do not claim to have a Turing test. — creativesoul
I am neither. "Fog" refers to something other than me. As does "a point". — creativesoul
The jump to the use of "consciousness" remains a mystery. — creativesoul
The avatar is beautiful, despite not being a real person. — Banno
This looks like nonsense to me. — creativesoul
..Just what I would expect the software to say... — Banno
Sorry but there is nothing clear about that use of those names. — creativesoul
Well, I'm convinced. So let's flip Turing's little test: Can you prove you are not a synthetic conversation partner? :wink: — Banno
You two are now playing a game that I am ill-equipped to play...
But it is just a game...
:wink: — creativesoul
And philosophy forums are so repetitious. I probably take less than a month to cycle through all my arguments. Taking a forum such as this as the statistical base, combined with Wolfram Alpha... might be quite convincing... — Banno