On Monday, October 14, 2013 3:17:06 PM UTC-4, Bruno Marchal wrote:
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> On 14 Oct 2013, at 20:13, Craig Weinberg wrote:
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> On Sunday, October 13, 2013 5:03:45 AM UTC-4, Bruno Marchal wrote:
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>> All object are conscious?
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> No objects are conscious.
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> We agree on this.
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>  
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>> Not at all. It is here and now. I have already interview such machines. 
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> Are there any such machines available to interview online?
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> I can give you the code in Lisp, and it is up to you to find a good free 
> lisp. But don't mind too much, AUDA is an integral description of the 
> interview. Today, such interviews is done by paper and pencils, and appears 
> in books and papers.
> You better buy Boolos 1979, or 1993, but you have to study more logic too.
>

Doesn't it seem odd that there isn't much out there that is newer than 20 
years old, and that paper and pencils are the preferred instruments? Maybe 
I was premature in saying it was promissory...it would appears that there 
has not been any promise for it in quite some time.
 

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>> It is almost applicable, but the hard part is that it is blind to its own 
>> blindness, so that the certainty offered by mathematics comes at a cost 
>> which mathematics has no choice but to deny completely. Because mathematics 
>> cannot lie, 
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>> G* proves <>[]f
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>> Even Peano Arithmetic can lie.  
>> Mathematical theories (set of beliefs) can lie.
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>> Only truth cannot lie, but nobody know the truth as such.
>>
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>  Something that is a paradox or inconsistent is not the same thing as an 
> intentional attempt to deceive. I'm not sure what 'G* proves <>[]f' means 
> but I think it will mean the same thing to anyone who understands it, and 
> not something different to the boss than it does to the neighbor.
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> Actually it will have as much meaning as there are correct machines (a 
> lot), but the laws remains the same. Then adding the non-monotonical 
> umbrella, saving the LĂ´bian machines from the constant mistakes and lies 
> they do, provides different interpretation of []f, like
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> I dream,
> I die,
> I get mad,
> I am in a cul-de-sac
> I get wrong
>
> etc.
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> It will depend on the intensional nuances in play.
>

Couldn't the machine output the same product as musical notes or colored 
pixels instead?
 

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>>
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>> it cannot intentionally tell the truth either, and no matter how 
>> sophisticated and self-referential a logic it is based on, it can never 
>> transcend its own alienation from feeling, physics, and authenticity. 
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>> That is correct, but again, that is justifiable by all correct 
>> sufficiently rich machines.
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> Not sure I understand. Are you saying that we, as rich machines, cannot 
> intentionally lie or tell the truth either?
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> No, I am saying that all correct machines can eventually justify that if 
> they are correct they can't  express it, and if they are consistent, it 
> will be consistent they are wrong. So it means they can eventually exploits 
> the false locally. Team of universal numbers get entangled in very subtle 
> prisoner dilemma. 
> Universal machines can lie, and can crash.
>

That sounds like they can lie only when they calculate that they must, not 
that they can lie intentionally because they enjoy it or out of sadism.

Craig
 

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> Bruno
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> http://iridia.ulb.ac.be/~marchal/
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