Summation is the operation of combining a sequence of numbers using addition; the result is their sum or total.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Summation
Ichneumonwasp said:
OK, so what you are saying is that summation, even in a general sense, is arithmetic in base ten?
The
computational definition of summation is adding numbers. The neurological drfinition of summation is adding inputs and outputs to neurons. Just because it happens to share the same name doesn't mean it has anything to do with computation.
That's a form of computation and neurons are not doing that. Isn't the term you're using actually "spatial summation"?
Ichneumonwasp said:
Are you saying that spatial summation (it's actual spatial and temporal, but that's another matter entirely) is not a form of summation? What are we really supposed to call it?
Call it a form of summation then. That doesn't mean the neuron is computing.
Definition of COMPUTE
transitive verb
: to determine
especially by mathematical means; also : to determine or calculate by means of a computer
http://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/compute
Is a neuron doing anything remotely like that?
No one argues that neurons do addition in the way that humans talk about doing it (so, I'm really not sure why you would try to imply that).
When you say that neurons are
computing, that's exactly what you're saying!
What neurons do is take inputs, add them together (sometimes subtracting), to arrive at a final input that is coded temporally. The behavior of neurons follows rules that are based in physics and biology and these rules are not completely chaotic like rocks falling.
A falling pachinko ball is not chaotic. It's behavior is goverened by physics. Is it computing it's way down?
They are quite controlled and produce a limited number of outputs. Why is that not a form of summation, not a form of calculation?
Because nothing is being calculated!
Definition of CALCULATE
transitive verb
1a :
to determine by mathematical processes <calculate the rate of acceleration>
Where are you getting your definitions?
Isn't the idea of calculation that inputs are summed following a set of rules to produce an output? Isn't that the essence of summation?
No. The essence of summation is adding numbers. NUMBERS!
Because it would not be a simulation of real consciousness. Do you go unconscious when no one's observing you?
Wait a second. Is there real consciousness and not real consciousness? Could there not be simply different forms of it.
Each particular instance could be a form. I have no idea what your conscious experience is actually like. However, you would agree that no type of consciousness dicovered so far is observer dependent, correct?
I don't believe for a second that a simulation ceases to be a simulation when no one is looking, so this is a moot point, but your point that it is a problem for RD and Pixy simply falls flat.
If no one is there to interpret the pixels on the screen, then that's all you have: pixels on a screen. It takes an observer to go to the next step and assign meaning to what's on the screen. This goes back to the falling abacus: just because the beads are moving doesn't mean its computing anything.
The simulation is either conscious or not unless you can decide on what constitutes real and not-real consciousness. There could potentially be any number of types of consciousness that do not follow a human pattern.
Potentially. There is potentially a tea cup around Jupiter, right?
See above. It would be qualiatatevly different than real consciousness because real consciousness is not observer dependent. I'm not sure observer-dependent consciousness is even a coherent concept.
If it isn't a coherent concept then why did you bring it up.
I'm not sure if it's coherent or not.
Simulations continue to occur whether anyone is looking at them, so now I am totally unsure what your point was.
Definition of SIMULATION
1: the act or process of simulating
2: a sham object : counterfeit
3a :
the imitative representation of the functioning of one system or process by means of the functioning of another <a computer simulation of an industrial process>
How do you get imitative representation without an observer?
I'm suggesting if it comes down between a recognized authority like Searle and a bunch of anonymous forum posters, the smart money is on the authority. Perhaps someone here has published something as influential as the Chinese Room? Anyone?
Sure and you'd generally be right if you were just going to decide on the person and not look at the argument. Are you telling me that you don't understand the argument or that you don't want to work through the argument? I didn't just say Searle was wrong. I gave you a reason why he was wrong.
You're reasoning is wrong, your definitions are wrong, and Searle's reasoning is right.
He is simply wrong. You don't have to believe me -- look at what neurons do. They summate. He's wrong. There is simply no reason to appeal to authority in this sort of situation, so I don't understand why you would want to go that way.
Because he's right?
Again, I tell you: summation is the operation of combining a sequence of numbers using addition; the result is their sum or total.
Can you at least see that inputs coming into a neuron are just that? Each EPSP in most CNS synapses is 1/30. They summate at the axon hillock to 1 (threshold) so that they neuron fires. We can call them numbers, or EPSPs or whatever we want.
We can call them numbers because we understand the concept of what a number is. There are no numbers involved in a neuron adding inputs and outputs. It's not calculating anything, by any stretch of the definition I've provided.
The point is that something summates to create a total. That total can then do something. It doesn't matter if you recognize it as a calculation or addition or anything for it to do what it does.
I'm not denying there are more or less outputs after it's done "summating". I'm asking how you're going from adding inputs and outputs to "determining, especially by mathematical means". There's quite the missing gap there.
Adding and subtracting numbers. Isn't that what computation is all about? Do you think numberless computation is possible?
A mathematical object.
I certainly think that computation without numbers is possible.
And now we're back to Westprog's point: everything becomes computation. Why stop at neurons? Rockslides and asteroid impacts and supernova are computation. It becomes a meaningless concept.
Computers do it all the time. They use electricity that amounts to the same thing as a number. Neurons use ion channels and synapses to do the same thing.
Computers are a collection of a lot of tiny switches. Computation only occurs when we assign meaning and values to the results of those switches. Do you think a chess computer is actually playing chess?
And how can electrcity "amount to the same thing" as a mathematical object?
Except we have multiple definitions going on and you're playing fast and loose with them. You don't seem so gung-ho about definitions as you were earlier in the thread.
How am I any less gung-ho about definitions than I was earlier?
Because now it's become a "semantic cesspool".
As I have said all along, I don't care what you want to call the process that neurons do. But what they do is summate inputs. It isn't complicated.
Not at all. Except when you go from spatial summation ----> computation. Then it becomes complicated. And wrong.
If you want to restrict your definition of computation to what humans do with numbers, as I have said all along, go right ahead.
But neurons are going to keep summating their inputs no matter what anyone wants to call it.
And rockslides will continue to ADD rocks to the ground. It's not computation.