You are right though that this kind of progress against the oldest of foes like death itself are only now on the verge of technological possibility, but striving to make them technologically possible should have been a driving goal for the whole history of humanity. — Pfhorrest
I’m extremely proud of transhumanists and techno-progressivists more generally, like David Pearce, for having the courage to dare to at least try to fix the biggest of problems that have always been either seen as hopeless inevitabilities or excused away with happy fantasies as not real problems at all. — Pfhorrest
First and foremost the general excuses for defeatism (quitting) need to be vanquished. I call these broadly “dogmatic transcendentalism” (roughly the religious mindset), “cynical relativism” (basically radical skeptics cum effective nihilists), and most dangerously “dogmatic relativists” (“Postmodernists”) and the “transcendent cynics” (what Postmodernists call “Modernists”) who are doomed to collapse into them. In short, we need people to get on board with the idea that doing something, in general, in every context, is both possible and necessary, neither useless nor hopeless. — Pfhorrest
And 9/11 happened 20 years ago. — ssu
You broke my parser. — fishfry
For BB(n) grows faster than any computable sequence of integers: indeed, if it didn’t, then one could use that fact to solve the halting problem, contradicting Turing’s theorem.
consider again a Turing machine M that halts if and only if there’s a contradiction in ZF set theory. Clearly such a machine could be built, with some finite number of states k. But then ZF set theory can’t possibly determine the value of BB(k) (or BB(k+1), BB(k+2), etc.), unless ZF is inconsistent! For to do so, ZF would need to prove that M ran forever, and therefore prove its own consistency, and therefore be inconsistent by Gödel’s Theorem.
Pretty wild stuff. — fishfry
Coherentism: none of our beliefs are foundational, and the truth of a belief can only be confirmed by its coherence with other beliefs. Thus, knowledge arises from a network of interdependent and mutually reinforcing beliefs. — Noisy Calf
Oh, and the Chineses Room - Google might be showing how the room could be constricted without a rule book... showing that Searle's basic insight, that language use is not syntactic, is correct, but without dismissing machine intelligence. — Banno
But I don't know enough about the busy beaver problem and its comparison with incompleteness to say anything about it. — TonesInDeepFreeze
That what does actually happen normally? That people follow norms? Yes, that is (statistically) normal. — Luke
One puzzle may be that in Wittgenstein meaning is pretty much replaced by use in a form of life; that is, it is not to be separated from the everyday activities in which you and I engage. But arguably that is what Google does in abstracting a vector representation of a word. — Banno
It will be interesting to see how the divide between Chomski and Bengio plays out - the link in your cited article is unfortunately broken. — Banno
In what sense does Wittgenstein advocate an adherence to these norms? — Luke
As others have pointed out, this is an incorrect reading of Wittgenstein. — StreetlightX
Far from that, Wittgenstein repeatedly rejected the labels assigned to him, moving restlessly from heir to a fortune to engineer to philosopher to teacher to hermit to architect to hospital orderly... while explicitly rejecting being labeled a behaviourist or logical atomist or logical empiricist.
I think you need to drop mention of Wittgenstein from your thesis. — Banno
I quite agree. The suggestion in the OP strikes me as a conservative misreading. Hence my request for further information, for which we will wait. — Banno
Hence my question. I would say Wittgenstein advocated keeping track of the rules one was using, or going against; but not blind adherence to them. — Banno
I think the idea of adherence to the rules of language paints a false picture. It is not as if we follow a rule book. — Fooloso4
Can you support this conjecture? — Banno
Humans, after all, reason to a logical judgement, but reason from an aesthetic judgement. On the one hand, we have to understand things about an object before we know what the object is, but on the other hand, we very well may already have feelings about something before we know what it is about it, that causes those feelings.
Expressions of emotion may be rational/irrational. But emotions themselves, as purely subjective conditions, are not. — Mww
As i see it both are labels the mind attaches to emotions. It's not the labels themselves that are important/interesting, but it's the motivations and the process of labeling that's important. — skyblack
Given that the concept of ‘emotional intelligence’ isn’t very widely accepted means any measurement of it is on pretty sketchy footing. — I like sushi
What have been the most worthwhile threads on the forums? — Banno
The ancient notion is that reason should rule the passions (emotions). It is that idea that has been overcome in modernity, replaced by the notion that we must be allowed to express them in a “healthy way”. But when you are overcome by anger, for example, how can you express that in a healthy way? You are already overcome. The outcome of that expression is most likely to be destruction...either of yourself or some other(s) or both. — Todd Martin