Hi Jason Resch  

Leibniz also wrote a book on jurisprudence and was a mining engineer.
  
 
Dr. Roger B Clough NIST (ret.) [1/1/2000]
See my Leibniz site at
http://independent.academia.edu/RogerClough


----- Receiving the following content -----  
From:  Jason Resch  
Receiver:  Everything List  
Time: 2013-07-08, 18:44:36 
Subject: Re: computationalism as a form of magic 




>From: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gottfried_Wilhelm_Leibniz 
> 
>Computation[edit 
>] 
> 
>Leibniz may have been the first computer scientist and information theorist. 
>[65]  
>Early 
>in life, he documented the binary numeral 
>system 
> (base  2), then revisited that system 
>throughout his career.[66] 
>He 
>anticipated Lagrangian 
>interpolation 
> and algorithmic information 
>theory. 
>His calculus ratiocinator 
>anticipated 
>aspects of the universal Turing 
>machine. 
>In 1934, Norbert Wiener claimed 
>to have found in Leibniz's writings a mention of the concept of 
>feedback, 
>central to Wiener's later cybernetic 
> theory. 
> 
>In 1671, Leibniz began to invent a machine that could execute all four 
>arithmetical operations, gradually improving it over a number of years. 
>This "Stepped Reckoner " 
>attracted fair attention and was the basis of his election to the Royal 
>Society  in 1673. A number of 
>such machines were made during his years in 
>Hanover, 
>by a craftsman working under Leibniz's supervision. It was not an 
>unambiguous success because it did not fully mechanize the operation of 
>carrying. Couturat reported finding an unpublished note by Leibniz, dated 
>1674, describing a machine capable of performing some algebraic operations. 
>[67]  
>Leibniz 
>also devised a (now reproduced) cipher machine, recovered by Nicholas 
>Rescher  in 
>2010.[68] 
> 
>Leibniz was groping towards hardware and software concepts worked out much 
>later by Charles Babbage  
> and Ada Lovelace . In 1679, 
>while mulling over his binary arithmetic, Leibniz imagined a machine in 
>which binary numbers were represented by marbles, governed by a rudimentary 
>sort of punched 
>cards.[69] 
>Modern 
>electronic digital computers replace Leibniz's marbles moving by gravity 
>with shift registers, voltage gradients, and pulses of electrons, but 
>otherwise they run roughly as Leibniz envisioned in 1679. 
> 
> 
>On Fri, Jul 5, 2013 at 11:15 PM, Roger Clough  wrote: 
> 
>>  Dear Prof. Tegmark, 
>> 
>> I have been trying to think of a way to make computationalism work 
>> but I can see no force that numbers might have on the physical world 
>> that might empower them. 
>> 
>> Instead I see computationalism as a form of magic. Serious magic if you 
>> will, 
>> but still magic, magic in the sense that saying the proper magic words or 
>> drawing certain figures or performing certain incantations or rituals will 
>> cause things to happen, presumably in imitation of those forms. 
>> 
>> But even though it is a form of magic, it may be that the numbers 
>> can be causal in some paranormal sense, if you can accept Leibniz's 
>> view that ideas seek perfection and physical realization is the 
>> highest perfection. If you can accept that, you might give some 
>> acceptance to the idea, and that actions can be preformed 
>> by intentions. 
>> 
>> Best, 
>> 
>>  Dr. Roger B Clough NIST (ret.) [1/1/2000] 
>> See my Leibniz site at 
>>  http://independent.academia.edu/RogerClough 
>> 
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>> 
>

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