keyfeatures
Critical Thinker
- Joined
- Feb 23, 2012
- Messages
- 436
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A Turing machine is a device that manipulates symbols on a strip of tape according to a table of rules. Despite its simplicity, a Turing machine can be adapted to simulate the logic of any computer algorithm, and is particularly useful in explaining the functions of a CPU inside a computer.
No, I called your willingness to accept the verdict of people you consider to be experts acting on faith. What would you call it?
Reason. Whose verdict should I accept ? Yours ?
I think all this talk of what a Turing Machine and what it isn't, in this context is nuts, but I'll participate anyway.
Let's start with wiki's opening on the subject:
Just because the Turing Machine model is succinct does no imply it is confined. It is universal.
My most useful model of computation is that every computer has three parts: Input, process, and output. A Turing Machin has a problem to solve on it's tape, it solves it, and writes it to the tape. That's what happens in computers, though the input and output do not have to be tapes.
All computers are nested versions of this. Interactive computers repeat processes continuously on incoming inputs and feed outputs.
A human brain takes input from the senses, processes it, and outputs to the muscles, glands...Continuously and repeatedly.
Sometimes output is to memory, and input is from memory. Sometimes inborn impulses, instincts programmed in the genes, are on the virtual input tape.
It's still, when you break down the nested layers, Turing Machines.
Neurons accept inputs, process them, and issue outputs. The TM model holds.
It's a silly argument. Your turn.
I would hope that you would judge from the arguments.
I thought I'd explained that. But, meh, never mind.You wrote: "So for practical purposes, lets assume it is deterministic."
Why should we assume it is deterministic in order to deal with it?
Time-dependence is not the same thing as order dependence.
If you try to write real time programs according to the Turing model - using some form of polling in a loop, usually - then you can sometimes get the thing to work, but not reliably - and multiple interacting events can never be reliably handled.
More importantly, it's not a good way to describe what you want to happen.
rocketdodger and dlorde do you think that computational means that our brain is after all predictable?
Furthermore, do you think that our brain is a part of determinist reality, such that uncertainty, creativity, free will etc... are no more than illusions?
For example, let's assume that activity or inactivity of a given neuron is insignificant, is there a clear way to predict when the given neuron will change its current state?
Order and timing are different things.
It's a silly argument. Your turn.
I thought I'd explained that. But, meh, never mind.
I have no idea - who?Who said that uncertainty and/or redundancy are not subjects for research "as they are"
Suppose one defines the 'given subject' in terms of its interaction with its in-vivo environment, i.e. a functional definition?... any attempt to define a given subject actually restricts its properties into in-vitro.
Do you think that it is possible to actually define in-vivo environment such that no factor is excluded? (please be aware of the fact that if any factor is excluded, then we do not actually deal with in-vivo environment).I have no idea - who?
Suppose one defines the 'given subject' in terms of its interaction with its in-vivo environment, i.e. a functional definition?
You cannot specify what happens in the nervous system, or the purpose of the operations of the nervous system, without time dependency - which is something entirely absent from the Turing model. Order and timing are different things.
If you try to write real time programs according to the Turing model - using some form of polling in a loop, usually - then you can sometimes get the thing to work, but not reliably - and multiple interacting events can never be reliably handled. More importantly, it's not a good way to describe what you want to happen.
Do you think that it is possible to actually define in-vivo environment such that no factor is excluded? (please be aware of the fact that if any factor is excluded, then we do not actually deal with in-vivo environment).
Been gone for a long while. Surprised this thread is still going on, actually.
And the fact that it's back to Turing machines is hilarious.
Good thing that the folks who actually study consciousness don't bother with that silliness.
Still got some posts in the can, but real life intervenes sometimes.
I do want to reply to a post on page 100 before I do anything else, tho.
You know, the funny thing abou the informationists is that they demand the impossible from information.
They want it to be simultaneously independent of physics AND to not require an observer.
How that' possible, they can't say, but they're just so doggone SURE it must be true!
No coherent theories, no evidence for their beliefs, a definition of "information" that reeks of theology, disdain for the actual study of consciousness, even more disdain for the laws of physics, absolutely zero accomplishments in creating consciousness... and yet they hijack just about every thread on the topic with their nonsense.
Keep up the good fight, informationists! If you repeat it long enough and loud enough, then it'll come true! Just like if you make a representation detailed enough, it'll become real!
Ah, the Pinocchio theory of reality.
If you add timing to the Turing model you still have a Turing model. What's the big deal?