It isn't a claim, is a reductio ad absurdum. Since nothing but pixel 
configurations have ever appeared in the context of GoL, there is no 
implied expectation that there ever will be. Elvis fits the criteria, as 
does ice cream cones, bags of money, nuclear submarines, and a sense of 
humor, of things that will never appear in GoL. It is no different than 
shaking an abacus in a certain way. With sophisticated machines you could 
indeed create what seem like very special and interesting patterns of the 
abacus by vibrating and turning it precisely - but that's it. That's all 
you are going to ever get out of the damn abacus. It isn't going to jump up 
and make you pancakes. It isn't a 'claim' to say that, it is an 
understanding of what is actually possible, what isn't and why. 


On Tuesday, August 28, 2012 5:17:36 PM UTC-4, William R. Buckley wrote:
>
> The burden of proof is not on me.  I am replying to your initial claim, 
> that Elvis will not appear in context of GoL.  
>
>  
>
> Intellectual honesty implies the proof is on you.
>
>  
>
> wrb
>
>  
>
>  
>
> *From:* everyth...@googlegroups.com <javascript:> [mailto:
> everyth...@googlegroups.com <javascript:>] *On Behalf Of *Craig Weinberg
> *Sent:* Tuesday, August 28, 2012 2:08 PM
> *To:* everyth...@googlegroups.com <javascript:>
> *Subject:* Re: Two reasons why computers IMHO cannot exhibit intelligence
>
>  
>
> It's intentional hyperbole, not a non-sequitur. I am making the comparison 
> between a program designed to produce simple patterns of pixels achieving a 
> trivial level of novelty within that constraint of design and the event of 
> any such program achieving an authentic transgression of its own 
> programmatic constraints.
>
> There is no need to prove this claim as it is not a claim, it is a factual 
> description and a clarification of the implications of that description. If 
> you are claiming that GoL can produce something other than meaningless 
> iterations of quantitative pixels, then the burden of proof is on you. 
> Where is the Elvis?
>
>
> On Tuesday, August 28, 2012 4:13:22 PM UTC-4, William R. Buckley wrote:
>
> Proof of non-sequitur.  You assert that GoL cannot invent Elvis Presley.  
> You have no proof of this claim.  You simply claim it.  Further, see 
>
>  
>
> http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Non_sequitur_%28logic%29
>
>  
>
> Your relevant statement is:  Conway's game of life can produce a new kind 
> of glider, but it can't come up with the invention of Elvis Presley, 
> regardless of how sophisticated the game is. 
>
>  
>
> QED
>
>  
>
>  
>
>  
>
> *From:* everyth...@googlegroups.com [mailto:everyth...@googlegroups.com] *On 
> Behalf Of *Craig Weinberg
> *Sent:* Tuesday, August 28, 2012 12:45 PM
> *To:* everyth...@googlegroups.com
> *Subject:* Re: Two reasons why computers IMHO cannot exhibit intelligence
>
>  
>
> On Tuesday, August 28, 2012 2:55:54 PM UTC-4, William R. Buckley wrote:
>
> No, it is not ad hominem.  It is a serious issue.
>
> Are they mutually exclusive? Telling someone they have a bad haircut could 
> be a serious issue too, but it doesn't mean it isn't ad hominem.
>  
>
>  
>
> The discussion of COMP is one of essentialism.
>
>  
>
> Your first argument hinges upon a non-sequitur.
>
> I can't defend against an unsupported accusation. All I can do is say, 'no 
> it doesn't'.
>
>  
>
> Your second argument hinges upon semiotics.  You have no way to 
>
> compare your experience (conscious or otherwise) to that of any 
>
> other creature; your umwelt is not my umwelt.
>
>
> Your presumption of my capacities to compare experiences depends on 
> exactly the same capacity that mine does. If you are right that your umwelt 
> is not my umwelt, then how do you know that my umwelt doesn't contain yours?
>
> Instead, why not assume a psychic unity of mankind. I don't have to assume 
> that I can't compare my experience to another creature at all. I can say 
> that if I step on a cat's tail and it reacts, that there is in fact every 
> reason to assume a comparable dimension of pain. It's sophistry to pretend 
> that we can't compare our own experience to others...we do it all the time. 
> Our sanity depends on it. It need not be questioned as the questioning 
> itself implies a hyper-reality of sense comparison between umwelts which 
> would be inaccessible if your proposition was true. You cut off the limb 
> you are sitting on to try to hit me with it.
>  
>
>  
>
> And, vitalism is not necessarily a call to Deity.  There are a great 
>
> many non-deist connotations to vitality.
>
>
> Who said anything about a deity?
>
> Craig
>  
>
>  
>
> wrb
>
>  
>
> *From:* everyth...@googlegroups.com [mailto:everyth...@googlegroups.com] *On 
> Behalf Of *Craig Weinberg
> *Sent:* Tuesday, August 28, 2012 10:51 AM
> *To:* everyth...@googlegroups.com
> *Subject:* Re: Two reasons why computers IMHO cannot exhibit intelligence
>
>  
>
> I agree with what Roger is saying here (and have of course expressed that 
> before often) and do not think that accusations of vitalism add anything to 
> the issue. It's really nothing but an ad hominem attack.
>
> I would only modify Roger's view in two ways:
>
> 1. Programs can and do produce outcomes that are not directly anticipated 
> by the programmer, but that these outcomes are trivial and do not transcend 
> the constraints of the program itself. Conway's game of life can produce a 
> new kind of glider, but it can't come up with the invention of Elvis 
> Presley, regardless of how sophisticated the game is. Blue cannot be 
> generated by any combination of black and white or one and zero.
>
> 2. Hardware does actually feel something, but not necessarily what we 
> would imagine. We use certain materials for computer chips and not hamsters 
> or milkshakes because reliable computation requires specific properties. We 
> only use materials which are subject to absolute control by outside 
> intervention and behave in an absolutely automatic way to sustain those 
> introduced controls. Living organisms are very much the opposite of that, 
> but that doesn't mean that inorganic matter has no experience or proto 
> experience on its own inertial frame of perception. It might, but we don't 
> know that. I would give the benefit of the doubt to all matter as having 
> common physical sense, but that organic chemistry, biology, zoology, and 
> anthropology present dramatic qualitative breakthroughs in elaboration of 
> sense.
>
> This is not vitalism. There is no magic juice of life-ness, only a rough 
> segmentation or diffracted caste relation of participation richness and 
> significance intensity. A living baby is not the same thing as a spare tire 
> to us, but it isn't significantly different to a tsunami. Neither the 
> significance nor the insignificance is an 'illusion', they are just 
> measures of the relations of the investment of experience across eons and 
> species and how that investment relates to the participants on every level.
>
> Roger and Searle are correct however in pointing out that the machine has 
> no stake in the outcome of the program, nor can it. I suggest that there is 
> an experience there, but likely very primitive - a holding and releasing 
> which is what we know as electric current within the semiconductors. There 
> is no actual current, only excited-empowered molecules. There is no 
> program, only a mirroring of our meticulous transcription of human motive 
> and its inevitable tautological products. 
>
> Since we are multi-layered, we can become confused when we assume that who 
> we are must be a monolithic representation of all that we are. If we expect 
> that the contents of all processes of the psyche should be available to our 
> verbal-cognitive specialists then we will be disappointed and turn to 
> Libet. We will mistake the automatism which supports lower levels of what 
> we are for the quasi-independence of the spectrum of identity which we 
> embody.
>
> Craig
>
>
> On Tuesday, August 28, 2012 12:13:23 AM UTC-4, William R. Buckley wrote:
>
> Roger:
>
>  
>
> I suggest that at root, you have vitalist sympathies.
>
>  
>
> wrb
>
>  
>
> *From:* everyth...@googlegroups.com [mailto:everyth...@googlegroups.com] *On 
> Behalf Of *Roger Clough
> *Sent:* Monday, August 27, 2012 4:07 AM
> *To:* everything-list
> *Subject:* Two reasons why computers IMHO cannot exhibit intelligence
>
>  
>
> Hi meekerdb 
>
>  
>
> IMHO I don't think that computers can have intelligence
>
> because intelligence consists of at least one ability:
>
> the ability to make autonomous choices (choices completely
>
> of one's own). Computers can do nothing on their own,
>
> they can only do what softward and harfdware tells them to do. 
>
>  
>
> Another, closely related, reason, is that there must be an agent that does 
> the choosing,
>
> and IMHO the agent has to be separate from the system.
>
> Godel, perhaps, I speculate. 
>
>  
>
>  
>
> Roger Clough, rcl...@verizon.net
>
> 8/27/2012 
>
> Leibniz would say, "If there's no God, we'd have to invent him so 
> everything could function."
>
> ----- Receiving the following content ----- 
>
> *From:* meekerdb 
>
> *Receiver:* everything-list 
>
> *Time:* 2012-08-26, 14:56:29
>
> *Subject:* Re: Simple proof that our intelligence transcends that of 
> computers
>
>  
>
> On 8/26/2012 10:25 AM, Bruno Marchal wrote:
> >
> > On 25 Aug 2012, at 12:35, Jason Resch wrote:
> >
> >>
> >> I agree different implementations of intelligence have different 
> capabilities and 
> >> roles, but I think computers are general enough to replicate any 
> intelligence (so long 
> >> as infinities or true randomness are not required).
> >
> > And now a subtle point. Perhaps.
> >
> > The point is that computers are general enough to replicate intelligence 
> EVEN if 
> > infinities and true randomness are required for it.
> >
> > Imagine that our consciousness require some ORACLE. For example under 
> the form of a some 
> > non compressible sequence 11101000011101100011111101010110100001... (say)
> >
> > Being incompressible, that sequence cannot be part of my brain at my 
> substitution level, 
> > because this would make it impossible for the doctor to copy my brain 
> into a finite 
> > string. So such sequence operates "outside my brain", and if the doctor 
> copy me at the 
> > right comp level, he will reconstitute me with the right "interface" to 
> the oracle, so I 
> > will survive and stay conscious, despite my consciousness depends on 
> that oracle.
> >
> > Will the UD, just alone, or in arithmetic, be able to copy me in front 
> of that oracle?
> >
> > Yes, as the UD dovetails on all programs, but also on all inputs, and in 
> this case, he 
> > will generate me successively (with large delays in between) in front of 
> all finite 
> > approximation of the oracle, and (key point), the first person 
> indeterminacy will have 
> > as domain, by definition of first person, all the UD computation where 
> my virtual brain 
> > use the relevant (for my consciousness) part of the oracle.
> >
> > A machine can only access to finite parts of an oracle, in course of a 
> computation 
> > requiring oracle, and so everything is fine.
>
> That's how I imagine COMP instantiates the relation between the physical 
> world and 
> consciousness; that the physical world acts like the oracle and provides 
> essential 
> interactions with consciousness as a computational process. Of course that 
> doesn't 
> require that the physical world be an oracle - it may be computable too.
>
> Brent
>
> >
> > Of course, if we need the whole oracular sequence, in one step, then 
> comp would be just 
> > false, and the brain need an infinite interface.
> >
> > The UD dovetails really on all programs, with all possible input, even 
> infinite non 
> > computable one.
> >
> > Bruno
> >
> > http://iridia.ulb.ac.be/~marchal/
> >
> >
> >
>
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