> On 16 Sep 2018, at 22:31, Brent Meeker <meeke...@verizon.net> wrote:
> 
> 
> 
> On 9/16/2018 11:07 AM, Bruno Marchal wrote:
>> No problem. I can explain why you will need a non computationalist theory of 
>> mind.
>> 
>> Given that there is no evidence at all for primary matter, nor for a non 
>> computationalist theory of mind, that seems very speculative to me.
>> 
>> I am aware that many materialist use (explicitly or implicitly) a mechanist 
>> theory of mind, but I can explain why materialism (or physicalism) is (are) 
>> incompatible with Indexical Digital Mechanism. (The doctrine that the brain 
>> function is Turing emulable at *some* level of description).
> 
> But it seems to me that a subconscious is incompatible with your theory of 
> mind.

By definition of computationalism, if there is a subconscious related to the 
brain, it will “survive” in the digital emulation of the brain.




>   So far as I can see you only propose to explain conscious thought as 
> computation, i.e. some computations instantiate conscious thoughts and some 
> don't. 

Yes, but the theory use the fact that computability is an absolute notion, and 
that provability, consistency, definability,  are  relative notion. 

In the five hypostases: everything comes from the nuance imposed on []p (that 
is []p & p, etc.)

Consciousness is defined by true, non provable, non dubitable, immediately 
knowable, and non definable. All universal machine are confronted with this. 
Identify a person with its set of beliefs, and I study ideally correct machine 
(on arithmetic and on themselves).




> But it appears that many, if not most, of our thinking is subconscious.  
> Where in your theory is this distinction encoded?

By the fact that no machine knows which machine she is, nor which number 
relation she is. Consciousness is only the part which is true, immediately 
knowable, non definable, etc.

The closer to consciousness, but still 3p, is “consistency”. But consciousness 
is even closer to the lodange of the “[]p & p” mode, that is <>p v p, or even 
better <>p v true(p). The or can be shown non constructive, and the true(p) is 
not definable, by Tarski, making consciousness (like knowledge) not definable.

“Subconscious” can be defined by sleeping subroutine, of by secondary activity 
on which attention is not focused. If you have a better definition, a more 
freudian one, if correct, the digital copy will obey to it, unless 
computationalism is false.

Bruno




> 
> Brent
> 
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