Moderator: Only_Humean


kyle2000 wrote:1. If (P)hysicalism is true, then everything is an (O)bject or a mathematical (F)orce (a force which can be predicted with mathematics).
2. If (U)nderstanding exists, then, at a bare minimum, it involves the understanding of how objects (R)elate to one another.
3. If something has understanding of how objects (R)elate to one another, then it cannot be only an (O)bject itself
4. Understanding exists
5. Therefore, something that is not an object itself exists

kyle2000 wrote:4. if X must either (S)end out massless signals Z beyond its material boundaries or be able to (R)eceive massless signals T so that it can obtain information on Y's qualities, then X must process that (I)nformation
6. If information must be placed into (C)ategories, then that placement is not (M)athematical/algorithmic

Only_Humean wrote:6. If information must be placed into (C)ategories, then that placement is not (M)athematical/algorithmic
The computer you typed this on places information from electrical potential differences into categories, algorithmically. With a conversion from a massless (voltage) form to a physical (electromagnetic storage) form.
6. If information must be placed into (C)ategories, then that placement is not (M)athematical/algorithmic
Flannel Jesus wrote:Yes, categories are very easily seen from a mathematical point of view.
My question to the OP is: if your thought process isn't algorithmic, then what is it? Just a constant?
kyle2000 wrote:3. If something has understanding of how objects (R)elate to one another, then it cannot be only an (O)bject itself
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kyle2000 wrote:6. If information must be placed into (C)ategories, then that placement is not (M)athematical/algorithmic
The computer you typed this on places information from electrical potential differences into categories, algorithmically. With a conversion from a massless (voltage) form to a physical (electromagnetic storage) form.
Do you think the computer built itself? The computer was built by someone that had understanding. Understanding is what we're trying to prove is not physical, so you've just begged the question that understanding is physical.

Only_Humean wrote: In fact, sorting anything into categories sounds like a pretty algorithmic process.
Only_Humean wrote:
I'm not trying to prove anything.
kyle2000 wrote:Wittgenstein basically proved that you can't come up with a rule for deciding when a game is not a game.
kyle2000 wrote:If sorting things into categories is algorithmic then tell me why it is the case that we human can't decide when science is not science, when heresy is not heresy, when is a game not a game.
Wittgenstein basically proved that you can't come up with a rule for deciding when a game is not a game.

Only_Humean wrote:This is true, and gives us a fact about how language relates to ways of life rather than to pure logic. He didn't prove that you can't come up with a rule for whether an apple is a fruit, though.
ZenKitty wrote:Only_Humean wrote:This is true, and gives us a fact about how language relates to ways of life rather than to pure logic. He didn't prove that you can't come up with a rule for whether an apple is a fruit, though.
Of course you can come up with rules for whether an apple is a fruit. But there's no algorithm to come up with this rule, without an infinite regress. What this means is that the rules are conventions. Someone can just arbitrarily say "X is the rule", and you build off of that rule and use it. There's no algorithm, without infinite regress, for that rule itself.
As Wittgenstein said in On Certainty, "253. At the foundation of well-founded belief lies belief that is not founded. 254. Any ‘reasonable’ person behaves like this. This is the conventional nature of thing.

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