I think that argument can go on forever, since the other party will retort that nothing existing was far more likely since “nothing” was much simpler than the actual universe, in the same as a universe just like ours, but were a star didn't exist, was more likely to exist than the actual universe. — Amalac
All of that seems to require an external world. The stimulus or sense data of type X must come from outside of the model. — Isaac
A mistake in behaviour though, no? It ought not have flown into the lamp (to its death), the result of any modal of lamp/world should have had it remain alive at the very least. Soft behaviourism?
How could we understand such an error, in a functionalist sense, without an external world being one way such that some model of it can be another? — Isaac
So stimuli-response then...? — Isaac
If that were the case, there'd be no errors, the moth would have meant to fly into the lamp. Since talk of 'errors' and 'intentions' seems so useful, I can't see the utility of a system which would exclude them.
But to be fair, I've never fully understood externalism, — Isaac
These errors of modelling (the dog's, the moth's) don't make the sources of the data internal, they're about generating appropriate responses. If the model generates an appropriate response, then in what way is it an error of interpretation? — Isaac
Maybe. It seems related to me - externalism, stimuli (as in stimuli-response)... — Isaac
Well that's why I asked where the stimulation comes from. Because if it comes from 'the world', then the thought experiment doesn't suggest we don't need the world, does it? — Isaac
I think you've misunderstood what behaviourism is. None of its proponents suggest that there is no mechanism, that the brain's just a non-functioning blob. — Isaac
A human being will react to poem, an amoeba won't. — Isaac
What I don't understand is how to make sense of a strong version of behaviorism. Doesn't it rule out sense in communication? — frank
But there really isn't anything newsworthy about weak content externalism, is there? — frank