On Sun, Jun 16, 2019 at 7:19 AM Bruno Marchal <marc...@ulb.ac.be> wrote:

>> I give metaphysics all the respect it deserves.
>
>
> >
> *If you did, you would more clearly make precise that you assume a
> physical reality.*
>

I could understand what you mean by "physical reality" if you could just
answer the following question. If there was a physical reality how would
things be different from if there was not a physical reality?


> > if we assume Mechanism, then such a physical reality has no sense.
>

Perhaps so I don't know because I don't know what "Mechanism" or "physical
reality" means in Brunospeak. You say a clock is not an example of a
mechanism but a textbook on computer science is. You say the ASCII sequence
"SKK"  is not a example if a mechanism but the ASCII sequence SKK is If a
clock isn't a mechanism then a car isn't one either and mechanics don't
work on machines.


> *> The belief in a God or in a Universe is logically incompatible with the
> assumption of Mechanism.*
>

Over the years I have managed to learn a few words of Brunospeak and in
that language "God" means a grey amorphous blob of unspecified size that
need not be intelligent or conscious; it's hard to see how that could be
logically incompatible with much of anything. It's even harder to
understand how something as dull as that could be of interest to anyone or
anything.


> *> Mechanism is the assumption that we can survive a digital brain
> transplant operation copying,*
>

OK, at last you've said something that is clear! By that definition I am a
firm believer in mechanism except that assumptions were not involved. I
know for a fact it is true because I know for a fact I have survived from
the day I was born to today, and every day since I was born I have been
undergoing a brain transplant operation, atoms are constantly shifting out
of my brain and new atoms shifting in to replace them. My brain is made out
of last year's mashed potatoes.


> > * you mean no examples of “a mechanism”? I gave infinitely many of
> them, all the “i” in the phi_i gives example of mechanism, if you know what
> the phi_i represents. *
>

So you want to know if the physical neurons in my physical brain in my
 physical head that sits atop my physical smolders are arranged in a
pattern that encodes information about that particular mathematical
notation, because otherwise phi_i would not correspond to any mathematical
idea at all. The answer is yes and so it does convey meaning to me.  But by
itself the "phi_i" can have a thought or perform a calculation just about
as well as the word "cow" can produce milk.


> > Make step 3 less simple (aka less stupid) and we can continue.
>
>
> *> You are the one who has systematically recast it with less precision.
> When the precision are added you*
>

Precision?! You can't even specify who the referent is in the personal
pronouns you use wall to wall in the mess that you claim is a proof.

 >> I have no idea if I believe in what you call  "physicalism" or not
because I don't know what you mean by mechanism.

>
> > YD + CT
>

IHA

>  you have already given 80,000 dollars to a doctor.
>

Yes.


> *> You are a mechanist practitioners.*
>

OK, but in Brunospeak does that also mean I'm a  physicalism practitioner?
Can you be one but not the other or are they synonyms?

> *You might have missed some of my earlier post,*
>

Yeah i missed that post of yours, and you missed my post where I proved
P=NP and the Riemann hypothesis. I posted it the same day you posted your
wonderful post you've been talking about for the last 10 years that solves
all metaphysical problems.

*> this was an idea by Aristotle, in contradiction with Pythagorus and
> Plato.*
>

Bruno, do you really think if  you throw enough ancient Greeks at me who
didn't know where the sun went at night I'll change my views concerning
modern physics and mathematics?

>> You haven't given ANY details about how an ASCII sequence by itself can
>> make a calculation because you don't know any details,
>
>
> > Which one?
>

# 42

>> if you did you'd be the richest most powerful man who ever lived. In
>> fact you wouldn't be a man you'd be a God.
>
>
> *> You talk like if the discovery of computation in arithmetic would lead
> automatically to their implementation in some physical reality.*


I talk like that because that is precisely what would happen *UNLESS*
physics can do something that mathematics can't. And since you clearly are
not a God I must conclude that physics can indeed do something that
mathematics can't.

 *> you need to implement the computer in the physical reality. That is
obvious.*

Exactly. And from that observation the only logical conclusion is physics
is more fundamental than mathematics.

 > *But that would not have been possible without the discovery made by
Tiuring and others*

True, you can't just slap together matter in any old way and expect it to
perform a calculation, but there is a way it can be done and Turing taught
us what it was..

John K Clark


>

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