Piggy
Unlicensed street skeptic
- Joined
- Mar 11, 2006
- Messages
- 15,905
This is not true if A and B are the same thing. And that's all that's needed for the comp.lits to be safe.
Not given what they're really saying.
PixyMisa, for example, tries to use this dodge by saying that the simulator and the "world of the simulation" are "one and the same".
But then look what he does....
When asked what the simulator is, he describes the machine.
When asked what the simulation is, he describes the target system. And claims it's objectively real in a way that's independent of the actual target system and any human imagination.
It's like saying that when Olivier plays Hamlet, Olivier and Hamlet are "one and the same", but that as Olivier is playing Hamlet, Hamlet becomes somehow "real" in some place other than the imagination of the viewers.
Can't have it both ways.
When Olivier plays Hamlet, Olivier is real, Hamlet exists in the imaginations of the audience (provided they understand what a play is, speak English, and so forth).
Or to put it another way, if I carve a statue of Napoleon, the only real thing I'm making is an oddly shaped hunk of marble. I do not simultaneously create a "real" Napoleon -- there is only a Napoleon in the imagination of a viewer.
To say that the behavior of Olivier produces the behavior of Olivier and the behavior of a Hamlet which exists anywhere outside the audience's imaginations is nonsensical.
It gets even worse when you then conclude that the simulator machine itself can be swapped for the thing it's supposed (by someone) to be simulating.
This requires that the symbolic value of what the machine is doing must be understood by the physical system you're putting it into.
It's like saying you can take the marble machine and use its symbolic function to replace a part that can emit more than a half dozen marbles at a time.
