On 5/6/2017 2:45 PM, David Nyman wrote:


On 6 May 2017 10:16 p.m., "Brent Meeker" <[email protected] <mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:



    On 5/6/2017 12:59 PM, David Nyman wrote:


    On 6 May 2017 8:08 p.m., "Brent Meeker" <[email protected]
    <mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:



        On 5/6/2017 1:49 AM, Bruno Marchal wrote:

                        Exactly why I used arithmetic as the
                        example.  Arithmetic, according to your
                        theory of consciousness, is independent of
                        perception and physics. Conscious thoughts,
                        beliefs are entailed by arithmetic and so
                        should be independent of tequila.


                    That does not follow. Even Robinso Arithmetic can
                    prove that a machine drinking some amount of
                    tequila will prove anything.


                That would be impressive.  Is this proof published?


            It is trivial. RA computes all states reaction in all
            computational histories. RA is a universal dovetailer, to
            be short. In the simulation of tequila + brain, people
            get drunk.


        That's what I was afraid of.  Your theory successfully
        predicts it because it predicts "everything", including
        people drink tequila and don't get drunk.


    Yes, but the key is the measure, isn't it. Everett also predicts
    that everything consistent with QM happens. Somehow this leads to
    a probabilistic account of what to expect. We know the math but
    we don't know the reason. You're no doubt bored with my banging
    on about Hoyle, but I must say that his is so far the only
    metaphor that has ever conveyed to me how something could be both
    certain and uncertain depending on one's point of view. So I
    think it's far too tricksy to say that comp predicts everything
    (or Everett, or eternal inflation for that matter). The key is
    the measure and how that measure discriminates between the
    typical, the unusual, and the downright weird. Open problem,
    sure, but hardly an empty or pointless one.

    But that's what I mean when I say Bruno's theory has no predictive
    success.  QM (and Everett) would correctly predict that alcohol
    molecules in the blood will interfere with neuronal function and
    THEN invoking the physicalist theory of mind, i.e. that mind
    supervenes on material events, it predicts that your ability to do
    arithmetic will be impaired by drinking tequila.  It will NOT
    predict the contrary with more than infinitesimal probability.  So
    it's misdirection to say that it's just a measure problem. Without
    having the right measure a probabilistic theory is just
    fantasy...or magic as Bruno would say.


I have no idea why you say that. I thought it was clear that if computationalism doesn't (ultimately) predict that its predominating computational mechanism (i.e. the one effectively self-selected by complex subjects, in this case, like ourselves) is the physics those selfsame subjects observe,

That would certainly be an accomplishment - which in another post Bruno says is trivially accomplished even in RA (I don't see it). But to succeed in prediction it is not enough to show that some world exists in which mind and physics are consistent (that the physics that mind infers is also the real physics that predicts effects on the mind). You need also to show this has large measure relative to contrary worlds. One can make a logic chopping argument that it must be that way for otherwise minds would not be making sense of the physics they perceived - but that makes the whole computational argument otiose.

That's how it is similar to the Boltzmann brain problem. I think Sean Carroll has solved the Boltzmann brain problem, but there is still some controversy.

then it must fail. In effect, at that point we would have arrived at a notion of computation that did indeed appear to supervene on objects in the effective physical environment, albeit qua computatio, as Bruno was wont to say. Hence if the physical brain got plastered, so would the mind apparently supervening on it.

That's true in this world...one among infinitely many.

Brent

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