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Alberto.
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The notion that computation produces information contradicts the notion that information is conservedmade famous by the black hole paradox http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Black_hole_information_paradox"The evolution of the wave function is determined by a unitary operator, and unitarity implies that information is conserved in the quantum sense. This is the strictest form of determinism."I wonder how that jives with MWI? Richard
OK. That's a good definition, and it is correct if ... we assume Church's thesis.
On 20 Jan 2014, at 21:17, Alberto G. Corona wrote:
Computation is understood as whatever made by a digital computer or
something that can be emulated (or aproximated) by a digital computer.
Goddam! Why. Even just about what is true in arithmetic cannot be emulated by any computer.
So everything is a computation.
I am afraid you might not really grasp what a computer is, conceptually. See my answer to stephen yesterday, which shows wahy Church thesis entails that most attribute of *machines* cannot be computed by a machine.
Or think about Cantor theorem. The set of functions from N top N is not enumerable, yet the set of *computable* functions is enumerable.For a mathematician, the computable is only a very tiny part of the truth.
That is a useless definition. because
it embrace everything.
Not veything can be emulated by a computer. few things actually in usual math. Some constructivist reduces math so that everything becomes computable, but even there, few agree.
Everything is legoland because everything can be emulated using lego
pieces? No, my dear legologist.
In Brouwer intuitionist analysis he uses the axiom "all function are continuous" or "all functions are computable", but this is very special approach, and not well suited to study computationalism (which becomes trivial somehow there).It will not work, because all computation can be done in a way which does not change the entropy at all. See Landauer, Zurek, etc.
What about this definition? Computation is whatever that reduces
entropy.
Only erasing information change entropy, and you don't need to erase information to compute.The UD generates uncertainty (from inside).
In information terms, in the human context, computation is
whatever that reduces uncertainty producing useful information and
thus, in the environment of human society, a computer program is used
ultimately to get that information and reduce entropy, that is to
increase order in society, or at least for the human that uses it.
That is the case with the definition you started above, and which is the one used by theoretical computer scientist.
A simulation is an special case of the latter.
So there are things that are computations: what the living beings do
at the chemical, physiological or nervous levels (and rational, social
and technological level in case of humans) . But there are things that
are not computations: almost everything else.
Bruno
http://iridia.ulb.ac.be/~marchal/
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On Tue, Jan 21, 2014 at 2:51 PM, Bruno Marchal <mar...@ulb.ac.be> wrote:
OK. That's a good definition, and it is correct if ... we assume Church's thesis.
On 20 Jan 2014, at 21:17, Alberto G. Corona wrote:
Computation is understood as whatever made by a digital computer or
something that can be emulated (or aproximated) by a digital computer.
Goddam! Why. Even just about what is true in arithmetic cannot be emulated by any computer.
So everything is a computation.
I am afraid you might not really grasp what a computer is, conceptually. See my answer to stephen yesterday, which shows wahy Church thesis entails that most attribute of *machines* cannot be computed by a machine.
Or think about Cantor theorem. The set of functions from N top N is not enumerable, yet the set of *computable* functions is enumerable.For a mathematician, the computable is only a very tiny part of the truth.
That is a useless definition. because
it embrace everything.
Not veything can be emulated by a computer. few things actually in usual math. Some constructivist reduces math so that everything becomes computable, but even there, few agree.
Everything is legoland because everything can be emulated using lego
pieces? No, my dear legologist.
Like the guys from Erlangen and Lorenzen. I gave myself some time with this, until I decided it was just prohibition/denial: "We just all pretend that weird stuff does not exist. Only not-weird stuff is real because we have clarity", is what I remember...
I am still amazed by how popular and how much support this seemed to get. Difficult to stay open and build understanding of these approaches for me. PGC
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The notion that computation produces information contradicts the notion that information is conserved
Liz, Richard:
I´m not talking about global reduction of entropy neither of the
universe neither a star, planet of black hole, but a local decrease of
entropy at the cost of a (bigger) increase of entropy in the
surroundings, so that the global entropy grows.
Computation is the nested, recursive enumeration of uniform symbolic bodies. The effectiveness of computation derives from its metaphorical application to material bodies, which can, through physical properties, be manipulated to deliver results which satisfy our expectations.
Computation is not consciousness or sensation. It has no qualities of its own, and a computer would be just as happy producing Mandelbrot sets as noise, just as abacus beads are just as happy in a pattern that we might find meaningful versus one which seems random.
On 22 January 2014 15:04, Craig Weinberg <whats...@gmail.com> wrote:
Computation is the nested, recursive enumeration of uniform symbolic bodies. The effectiveness of computation derives from its metaphorical application to material bodies, which can, through physical properties, be manipulated to deliver results which satisfy our expectations.
Sorry to be dense but what is "the nested, recursive enumeration of uniform symbolic bodies" ?
Computation is not consciousness or sensation. It has no qualities of its own, and a computer would be just as happy producing Mandelbrot sets as noise, just as abacus beads are just as happy in a pattern that we might find meaningful versus one which seems random.
I'm not sure if you are trying to imply something about the nature of the brain and consciousness here, or not. Presumably brain cells "would be just as happy" recognising granny or solving equations - that is, brain cells take in signals from other brain cells, and if the sum of these exceeds some threshold, they send out a signal of their own. This seems fairly similar to what NAND gates do inside a computer. (Or what the cogs in a difference engine do, or the floating weights in the Olympia computer do, etc.)
So one could equally well say, "what brain cells do is not consciousness or sensation".
Yes presumably brain cells, when lumped together into a brain, manage to produce consciousness and sensation, and apparently they do this through a process that is at least somewhat similar to what the logic gates inside computers do.
So, to clarify, are you claiming that consciousness cannot be produced by computation,
or just making the observation that the process of computation is not the same thing as consciousness or sensation, much as my brain isn't the same thing as my thoughts?
AddendumSorry a wee typo. I meant "Yet presumably brain cells, when lumped together into a brain..."
On 22 January 2014 15:04, Craig Weinberg <whats...@gmail.com> wrote:
Computation is the nested, recursive enumeration of uniform symbolic bodies. The effectiveness of computation derives from its metaphorical application to material bodies, which can, through physical properties, be manipulated to deliver results which satisfy our expectations.
Sorry to be dense but what is "the nested, recursive enumeration of uniform symbolic bodies" ?
Computation is understood as whatever made by a digital computer or
something that can be emulated (or aproximated) by a digital computer.
So everything is a computation. That is a useless definition. because
it embrace everything.
Everything is legoland because everything can be emulated using lego
pieces? No, my dear legologist.
What about this definition? Computation is whatever that reduces
entropy. In information terms, in the human context, computation is
whatever that reduces uncertainty producing useful information and
thus, in the environment of human society, a computer program is used
ultimately to get that information and reduce entropy, that is to
increase order in society, or at least for the human that uses it.
A simulation is an special case of the latter.
So there are things that are computations: what the living beings do
at the chemical, physiological or nervous levels (and rational, social
and technological level in case of humans) . But there are things that
are not computations: almost everything else.
--
Alberto.
A process which transforms information?
Ultimately, digital computation comes down to the NAND operation, I'm told, which means it's a lot of "bit twiddling" which ultimately transforms one lots of bits into another. I guess versions with non-binary data (like DNA I assume?) can be reduced in principle to binary...
Not sure about the entropy definition. Since nothing reduces entropy globally, I assume you mean only locally... Or at the cosmic scale? The expansion of the universe supposedly reduces entropy, or makes more states available to matter at least (I think it increases the maximum available entropy, as per Beckenstein, rather than reducing it).
Well, life does that, I guess, temporarily...
Liz, Richard:
I´m not talking about global reduction of entropy neither of the
universe neither a star, planet of black hole, but a local decrease of
entropy at the cost of a (bigger) increase of entropy in the
surroundings, so that the global entropy grows.
I mean local. A computation becomes whatever that permit the pumping
of entropy from inwards to outwards and thus maintain the integrity of
the entity that computes to do further computations. That is the
definition of life in physical terms. so that life and computation are
entangled in some way. The byproduct of this activity is an increase
of entropy of the surroundings. No thermodynamical or any other
physical law is violated.
Within this definition, a computer alone does not perform computations
a man that uses the computer to calculate his VAT declaration is
performing a computation, because doing so the man has the information
to deal with entropy increase produced by law enforcers. The
semaphore system in a city perform computations when considering the
system as the city as a whole. for the same reason. but also any
living being computes as well.
There hasn´t to be digital. analogic, chemical computations, for
example, hormone levels can be part of a computation. Neurons are not
digital. the activation potentials are not quantized to certains
discrete levels. Digital computation, for example in DNA
encoding-decoding or in the case of digital computers are good for
storing and communicating information for a long time against
environmental noise. Shannon law demonstrate why it is so. there is
nothing magic about digital. But when noise is not a concern,
analogical paths of chemical reactions with protein catalizers perform
fine computations. More often than not, computation is
analogic-digital. Living beings do it so. But also human systems, a
car with a man inside, keeps entropy so there is a analogico-digital
computation going on.
So computation in this sense means not only computation as such but
also perception or data input -or information intake- and a proper
response (as result of the computation) in the physical world that
keeps the internal entropy.
On 20 Jan 2014, at 21:17, Alberto G. Corona wrote:
> Computation is understood as whatever made by a digital computer or
> something that can be emulated (or aproximated) by a digital computer.
OK. That's a good definition, and it is correct if ... we assume
Church's thesis.
> So everything is a computation.
Goddam! Why. Even just about what is true in arithmetic cannot be
emulated by any computer.
I am afraid you might not really grasp what a computer is,
conceptually. See my answer to stephen yesterday, which shows wahy
Church thesis entails that most attribute of *machines* cannot be
computed by a machine.
Or think about Cantor theorem. The set of functions from N top N is
not enumerable, yet the set of *computable* functions is enumerable.
Dear Bruno,
On Tuesday, January 21, 2014 8:51:14 AM UTC-5, Bruno Marchal wrote:
On 20 Jan 2014, at 21:17, Alberto G. Corona wrote:
> Computation is understood as whatever made by a digital computer or
> something that can be emulated (or aproximated) by a digital computer.
OK. That's a good definition, and it is correct if ... we assume
Church's thesis.
> So everything is a computation.
Goddam! Why. Even just about what is true in arithmetic cannot be
emulated by any computer.
I am afraid you might not really grasp what a computer is,
conceptually. See my answer to stephen yesterday, which shows wahy
Church thesis entails that most attribute of *machines* cannot be
computed by a machine.
Or think about Cantor theorem. The set of functions from N top N is
not enumerable, yet the set of *computable* functions is enumerable.That is a theorem that takes certain axioms as true... We can build theories with other axioms...
I wish to escape the prison of the Tennenbaum Theorem!
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On 22 Jan 2014, at 20:05, Stephen Paul King wrote:Dear Bruno,
On Tuesday, January 21, 2014 8:51:14 AM UTC-5, Bruno Marchal wrote:
On 20 Jan 2014, at 21:17, Alberto G. Corona wrote:
> Computation is understood as whatever made by a digital computer or
> something that can be emulated (or aproximated) by a digital computer.
OK. That's a good definition, and it is correct if ... we assume
Church's thesis.
> So everything is a computation.
Goddam! Why. Even just about what is true in arithmetic cannot be
emulated by any computer.
I am afraid you might not really grasp what a computer is,
conceptually. See my answer to stephen yesterday, which shows wahy
Church thesis entails that most attribute of *machines* cannot be
computed by a machine.
Or think about Cantor theorem. The set of functions from N top N is
not enumerable, yet the set of *computable* functions is enumerable.That is a theorem that takes certain axioms as true... We can build theories with other axioms...
Always. But that would made sense only if you provide the other axioms.
Axioms like the anti- foundation axiom, finite versions of the axiom of choice, axioms that imply alternatives to the Cantor continuum hypothesis, etc.
I wish to escape the prison of the Tennenbaum Theorem!This looks non sensical to me. But even if there were some sense here, I remind you that I gave you two days ago, a constructive proof of the existence of non computable functions, based on a constructive diagonalization procedure (unlike the one by Cantor), (and Church's thesis).Just that with Cantor's result, it is more easy.
"A structure
in the language of PA is recursive if there are recursive functions + and × from
to
, a recursive two-place relation < on
, and distinguished constants
such that

where
indicates isomorphism and
is the set of (standard) natural numbers. Because the isomorphism must be a bijection, every recursive model is countable. There are many nonisomorphic countable nonstandard models of PA."
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On 21 Jan 2014, at 15:45, Alberto G. Corona wrote:
> It is a phisical definition of computation in the physical world, to
> distinguish what physical phenomena are computations and what are not.
> I don´t care about mathematical oddities.
But nobody has found such a definition. Physical computation are only
recognized as computation in machine that we can build, from subset of
physical laws, to implement the mathematical definition.
Then it is a theorem that we cannot recognize something as being a
computation, even in the arithmetical reality.
We can build one and
recognize those we built, or we can bet that some process computes,
like when saying "yes" to a doctor. But there is no general means to
see if something is a computation or not, and this will depends in
part of we look at it.
Computability is a notion discovered in math. It is related to the key
discovery of Turing (also some others) of the universal (Turing)
machine.
You can defend naturalism, or physicalism, and you have the right to
believe in a primitive physical universe. I am agnostic, and I have to
be, if only because we have not yet decided between Plato and
Aristotle. We are very ignorant, notably on the mind-body question.
I do not defend computationalism. I just show that IF we assume it,
then we get a constructive and testable platonic theology, which
explains physics. And I have done a piece of the derivation and tested
it.
If you are right on metaphysical naturalism, with a real ontological
universe, then comp is wrong. That is all what I say.
>
> Computation in this sense is a manifestation of teleological entities
> capable of maintaining his internal structure.
I can accept this as a putative truth about a notion of physical
computation, but this has not yet been defined.
"reducing entropy" was
a good try, less wrong than "quantum computation" (despite here Turing
universality is verifiable), but it does not work as nature can
compute without dissipating energy (indeed quantum computers requite
that).
> Math do not compute.
That does not make a lot of sense.
On Tuesday, January 21, 2014 11:08:45 PM UTC-5, Liz R wrote:On 22 January 2014 15:04, Craig Weinberg <whats...@gmail.com> wrote:
Computation is the nested, recursive enumeration of uniform symbolic bodies. The effectiveness of computation derives from its metaphorical application to material bodies, which can, through physical properties, be manipulated to deliver results which satisfy our expectations.
Sorry to be dense but what is "the nested, recursive enumeration of uniform symbolic bodies" ?
I think that it's a reflection of the Totality as seen from a hypothetical exterior. If you look at a crowd of people from a the top of a building, you can count them, you can count the number of times someone joins the crowd, you can count the rate that the crowd grows, you can count the rate that growth grows, etc. It's derivative abstraction that can be made useful in prediction and control of things that behave like crowds. If you want to know something about the individuals in the crowd, computation is much less relevant. You have to break them down into symbolic categories that act like uniform data objects...which they are not.
Dear Craig,
On Wednesday, January 22, 2014 9:19:54 AM UTC-5, Craig Weinberg wrote:
On Tuesday, January 21, 2014 11:08:45 PM UTC-5, Liz R wrote:On 22 January 2014 15:04, Craig Weinberg <whats...@gmail.com> wrote:
Computation is the nested, recursive enumeration of uniform symbolic bodies. The effectiveness of computation derives from its metaphorical application to material bodies, which can, through physical properties, be manipulated to deliver results which satisfy our expectations.
Sorry to be dense but what is "the nested, recursive enumeration of uniform symbolic bodies" ?
I think that it's a reflection of the Totality as seen from a hypothetical exterior. If you look at a crowd of people from a the top of a building, you can count them, you can count the number of times someone joins the crowd, you can count the rate that the crowd grows, you can count the rate that growth grows, etc. It's derivative abstraction that can be made useful in prediction and control of things that behave like crowds. If you want to know something about the individuals in the crowd, computation is much less relevant. You have to break them down into symbolic categories that act like uniform data objects...which they are not.Ah, how easy is it to mistake the Map for the Territory.
Consciousness uses computation to offload that which is too monotonous to find meaningful any longer. That is the function of computation, automation, and mechanism in all cases: To remove or displace the necessity for consciousness. What is the opposite of automatic? Manual. What is manual? By hand - intentional, personal, aware.
See what I mean?
On Wednesday, January 22, 2014 5:10:34 AM UTC-5, Liz R wrote:AddendumSorry a wee typo. I meant "Yet presumably brain cells, when lumped together into a brain..."
It bugs me that you can't edit after posting on here. I guess every forum has its irritating features.
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Dear Bruno,On Wed, Jan 22, 2014 at 2:30 PM, Bruno Marchal <mar...@ulb.ac.be> wrote:
On 22 Jan 2014, at 20:05, Stephen Paul King wrote:Dear Bruno,
On Tuesday, January 21, 2014 8:51:14 AM UTC-5, Bruno Marchal wrote:
On 20 Jan 2014, at 21:17, Alberto G. Corona wrote:
> Computation is understood as whatever made by a digital computer or
> something that can be emulated (or aproximated) by a digital computer.
OK. That's a good definition, and it is correct if ... we assume
Church's thesis.
> So everything is a computation.
Goddam! Why. Even just about what is true in arithmetic cannot be
emulated by any computer.
I am afraid you might not really grasp what a computer is,
conceptually. See my answer to stephen yesterday, which shows wahy
Church thesis entails that most attribute of *machines* cannot be
computed by a machine.
Or think about Cantor theorem. The set of functions from N top N is
not enumerable, yet the set of *computable* functions is enumerable.That is a theorem that takes certain axioms as true... We can build theories with other axioms...Always. But that would made sense only if you provide the other axioms.
Axioms like the anti- foundation axiom, finite versions of the axiom of choice, axioms that imply alternatives to the Cantor continuum hypothesis, etc.
We can design our theories toward some goal.
This could be said to be cheating and assuming what one wishes to proof, but I submit that canonical logical has done this all along. For example the use of the foundation axiom to prevent self-containing sets - which prevent self-reference...
I wish to escape the prison of the Tennenbaum Theorem!This looks non sensical to me. But even if there were some sense here, I remind you that I gave you two days ago, a constructive proof of the existence of non computable functions, based on a constructive diagonalization procedure (unlike the one by Cantor), (and Church's thesis).Just that with Cantor's result, it is more easy.It is becoming clear that going with what is "easy" is a problem.
Nature does not obey our wishes of convenience.
It is she who we must obey and modify our assumptions so that our models and theories match empirical data.Maybe I am falling victim to a wish, maybe not, but the Tennenbaum's theorem's prohibition of no countable nonstandard model of Peano arithmetic (PA), and thus no recursive functions for computation makes some assumptions.For example:"A structurein the language of PA is recursive if there are recursive functions + and × from
to
, a recursive two-place relation < on
, and distinguished constants
such that
whereindicates isomorphism and
is the set of (standard) natural numbers. Because the isomorphism must be a bijection, every recursive model is countable. There are many nonisomorphic countable nonstandard models of PA."
Why must this isomorphism always a bijection?"...there are concrete categories in which bijective morphisms are not necessarily isomorphisms (such as the category of topological spaces), and there are categories in which each object admits an underlying set but in which isomorphisms need not be bijective (such as the homotopy category of CW-complexes)."The Stone duality that I am considering for a solution to the mind-body problem is a subset of the greater Physical things-Representations duality. You start with AR which, I claim, is equivalent to an axiom that only representations (in the form of Arithmetic) exist.
You then use the fact that representations can be of themselves, via the Godel numbering or equivalent schema, to work out a brilliant result that shows that the physical world can not be an ontological primitive. But it has an open problem: What is an Arithmetic Body?
If an Arithmetic body is a topological space that is the Stone dual of the logical algebra of the computations and there are many mutually irreducible (via the non-isomorphism of countable nonstandard models of PA) "bodies". These "bodies" can share a set of functions (Hamiltonians?) that have a morphism into the countable recursive functions. ISTM that will allow us to obtain the Church Thesis as a special case. We can also get much more and possibly address questions of interaction and concurrency that cannot even be stated in the definition of a Turing Machine.Assuming that the Integers and Arithmetic are all that exist is a gilded prison for our minds.
Dear Bruno,
On Tuesday, January 21, 2014 1:11:16 PM UTC-5, Bruno Marchal wrote:
On 21 Jan 2014, at 15:45, Alberto G. Corona wrote:
> It is a phisical definition of computation in the physical world, to
> distinguish what physical phenomena are computations and what are not.
> I don´t care about mathematical oddities.
But nobody has found such a definition. Physical computation are only
recognized as computation in machine that we can build, from subset of
physical laws, to implement the mathematical definition.Why not? The solution is staring us in the face. We have to recognize that the class of Physical systems have related a class of Representations: all of the possible measurement data of a physical system. We can examine the measurement data and generate simulations of the physical system in order to predict its behavior. We call this Physics.
Then it is a theorem that we cannot recognize something as being a
computation, even in the arithmetical reality.Sure, but that assumes that one is dealing with an infinite set. The set of measurable data of a physical system is not infinite.
We can build one and
recognize those we built, or we can bet that some process computes,
like when saying "yes" to a doctor. But there is no general means to
see if something is a computation or not, and this will depends in
part of we look at it.This remark seems to have an interesting implication: that if I examine some string of code that might happen to be a simulation of a physical system, I will not be able to know which physical system it is. We get universality of computation this way?
Computability is a notion discovered in math. It is related to the key
discovery of Turing (also some others) of the universal (Turing)
machine.But this universality comes with a great price. It abstracts away time and space and all the rest of our local reality.
You can defend naturalism, or physicalism, and you have the right to
believe in a primitive physical universe. I am agnostic, and I have to
be, if only because we have not yet decided between Plato and
Aristotle. We are very ignorant, notably on the mind-body question.Umm, your agnosticism does not seem very strong. You defend AR very strongly.
I have offered you a sketch of a solution to the mind-body problem and you vigorously attack it with demands for formalism that I cannot write.
What if both Plato and Aristotle are wrong?
I do not defend computationalism. I just show that IF we assume it,
then we get a constructive and testable platonic theology, which
explains physics. And I have done a piece of the derivation and tested
it.It does not take much to show examples of your defend, Bruno. You are lying to yourself in claiming "I do not defend computationalism." You will not consider any alternative.
If you are right on metaphysical naturalism, with a real ontological
universe, then comp is wrong. That is all what I say.Pfft, that is a false dichotomy.
It is not necessary to assume ontological primitives that have some set of properties to the exclusion of others.
You hold onto this dichotomy because it is your tool to defend AR.
>
> Computation in this sense is a manifestation of teleological entities
> capable of maintaining his internal structure.
I can accept this as a putative truth about a notion of physical
computation, but this has not yet been defined.Why do we need a well founded definition?
I offer a non-well founded definition: Computation is any transformation of Information. Information does not need to be of physical systems; it can be of representational systems: like you favored Sigmas and PA.
"reducing entropy" was
a good try, less wrong than "quantum computation" (despite here Turing
universality is verifiable), but it does not work as nature can
compute without dissipating energy (indeed quantum computers requite
that).Where do you get that rubbish idea?
Quantum computation has been proven to require resources if it is to be evaluated.
Sure, the evolution of the phase is Unitary, but this holds for QM systems in isolation. The only real example of such is the Universe itself.
We get the Wheeler-Dewitt equation with its vanishing of time.
> Math do not compute.
That does not make a lot of sense.Math performs no actions on its own.
> Moreover it is an
> operational definition closer to everyday reality and includes all
> that is traditionally called computer science and biology (and
> sociology) within a wider physical framework.
May be. You did not provide a definition of physical computation. Nor
of "physical", which might help a skeptic like me. The only one you
gave was "reducing entropy". But it does not work. It might work for
life perhaps. It is certainly an interesting idea. But it is not
"computation". You can't change definition at will, or we are talking
about different things. The mathematical notion of computation is NOT
controversial. The physical notion of computation is not even
existing, and most attempts are controversial.The existence of my desktop computer is obvious to me....
On 22 Jan 2014, at 23:16, Stephen Paul King wrote:Dear Bruno,
On Tuesday, January 21, 2014 1:11:16 PM UTC-5, Bruno Marchal wrote:
On 21 Jan 2014, at 15:45, Alberto G. Corona wrote:
> It is a phisical definition of computation in the physical world, to
> distinguish what physical phenomena are computations and what are not.
> I don´t care about mathematical oddities.
But nobody has found such a definition. Physical computation are only
recognized as computation in machine that we can build, from subset of
physical laws, to implement the mathematical definition.
Why not? The solution is staring us in the face. We have to recognize that the class of Physical systems have related a class of Representations: all of the possible measurement data of a physical system. We can examine the measurement data and generate simulations of the physical system in order to predict its behavior. We call this Physics.I don't see how this could make sense. But if it did, why don't you use it and provide that definition of "physical computation"?
Then it is a theorem that we cannot recognize something as being a
computation, even in the arithmetical reality.Sure, but that assumes that one is dealing with an infinite set. The set of measurable data of a physical system is not infinite.In which theory? As long as we don't have the theory we can't say. I assume comp, and I show the TOE does not have to axiom anything infinite. Elementary arithmetic don't assume infinite set.
We can build one and
recognize those we built, or we can bet that some process computes,
like when saying "yes" to a doctor. But there is no general means to
see if something is a computation or not, and this will depends in
part of we look at it.This remark seems to have an interesting implication: that if I examine some string of code that might happen to be a simulation of a physical system, I will not be able to know which physical system it is. We get universality of computation this way?
Computability is a notion discovered in math. It is related to the key
discovery of Turing (also some others) of the universal (Turing)
machine.But this universality comes with a great price. It abstracts away time and space and all the rest of our local reality.But we have discovered it, and it does not abstract space and time away, it explains the persistent illusion with all possible details. It says only that adding an axiom at that level cannot work.
You can defend naturalism, or physicalism, and you have the right to
believe in a primitive physical universe. I am agnostic, and I have to
be, if only because we have not yet decided between Plato and
Aristotle. We are very ignorant, notably on the mind-body question.Umm, your agnosticism does not seem very strong. You defend AR very strongly.No. I debunk invalid argument against it, with some vigor, perhaps.And yes, I do tend to believe that 17 is prime.
I have offered you a sketch of a solution to the mind-body problem and you vigorously attack it with demands for formalism that I cannot write.Only because you are using your informal and unclear ideas to criticize the UDA's consequence.
What if both Plato and Aristotle are wrong?What if you are wrong?
I do not defend computationalism. I just show that IF we assume it,
then we get a constructive and testable platonic theology, which
explains physics. And I have done a piece of the derivation and tested
it.It does not take much to show examples of your defend, Bruno. You are lying to yourself in claiming "I do not defend computationalism." You will not consider any alternative.I thought you defend computationalism also.My case is different. I am agnostic on computationalism. But I study its consequences. it is my job.And, actually, I don't see any other way to even just conceive an alternative.
If you are right on metaphysical naturalism, with a real ontological
universe, then comp is wrong. That is all what I say.Pfft, that is a false dichotomy.Then UDA is flawed.It is not necessary to assume ontological primitives that have some set of properties to the exclusion of others.Then your ontology is amorphous. Nothing can emerge from it, without magic.
You hold onto this dichotomy because it is your tool to defend AR.I need indeed that 2+2=4.
>
> Computation in this sense is a manifestation of teleological entities
> capable of maintaining his internal structure.
I can accept this as a putative truth about a notion of physical
computation, but this has not yet been defined.Why do we need a well founded definition?We don't.I offer a non-well founded definition: Computation is any transformation of Information. Information does not need to be of physical systems; it can be of representational systems: like you favored Sigmas and PA.You can't change the definition. Create a new concept if you want, but computation, or the weaker notion of computability that I need, is well defined by Church thesis."reducing entropy" was
a good try, less wrong than "quantum computation" (despite here Turing
universality is verifiable), but it does not work as nature can
compute without dissipating energy (indeed quantum computers requite
that).Where do you get that rubbish idea?If a quantum computer dissipates energy, the entanglement will propagate from the environment, and the quantum information will be lost. It has been shown (by Landauer and zurel, that only erasing information needs energy, and logicians knows since some work by Hao Wang, in the 1950, (I think) that universal computability can be obtained with machine which never erase memory.(You are Insulting. I take it that you have no argument).
Quantum computation has been proven to require resources if it is to be evaluated.Locally. because you need to cut. But read and paste does not require it.
Sure, the evolution of the phase is Unitary, but this holds for QM systems in isolation. The only real example of such is the Universe itself.Which would be enough.
We get the Wheeler-Dewitt equation with its vanishing of time.This go in the comp direction, although a lot of work remains to have a clearer view on this.
> Math do not compute.
That does not make a lot of sense.Math performs no actions on its own.OK. Math is not even something that we can defined in math.
> Moreover it is an
> operational definition closer to everyday reality and includes all
> that is traditionally called computer science and biology (and
> sociology) within a wider physical framework.
May be. You did not provide a definition of physical computation. Nor
of "physical", which might help a skeptic like me. The only one you
gave was "reducing entropy". But it does not work. It might work for
life perhaps. It is certainly an interesting idea. But it is not
"computation". You can't change definition at will, or we are talking
about different things. The mathematical notion of computation is NOT
controversial. The physical notion of computation is not even
existing, and most attempts are controversial.The existence of my desktop computer is obvious to me....OK. But that "obviousness" is the mystery we can explain in the comp theory. "obvious" is 1p, and treated in the "& p" hypostases.
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Dear Bruno,On Thu, Jan 23, 2014 at 4:22 AM, Bruno Marchal <mar...@ulb.ac.be> wrote:
On 22 Jan 2014, at 23:16, Stephen Paul King wrote:Dear Bruno,
On Tuesday, January 21, 2014 1:11:16 PM UTC-5, Bruno Marchal wrote:
On 21 Jan 2014, at 15:45, Alberto G. Corona wrote:
> It is a phisical definition of computation in the physical world, to
> distinguish what physical phenomena are computations and what are not.
> I don´t care about mathematical oddities.
But nobody has found such a definition. Physical computation are only
recognized as computation in machine that we can build, from subset of
physical laws, to implement the mathematical definition.
Why not? The solution is staring us in the face. We have to recognize that the class of Physical systems have related a class of Representations: all of the possible measurement data of a physical system. We can examine the measurement data and generate simulations of the physical system in order to predict its behavior. We call this Physics.I don't see how this could make sense. But if it did, why don't you use it and provide that definition of "physical computation"?A computation is any transformation of information.
Information is any distinction between two things that makes a difference to a third.What happens when the ability to make distinctions vanishes?
Then it is a theorem that we cannot recognize something as being a
computation, even in the arithmetical reality.Sure, but that assumes that one is dealing with an infinite set. The set of measurable data of a physical system is not infinite.In which theory? As long as we don't have the theory we can't say. I assume comp, and I show the TOE does not have to axiom anything infinite. Elementary arithmetic don't assume infinite set.Elementary Arithmetic does not assume the Integers, implicitly? Take the empty set, put it in a set, put the result in a set,
repeat infinitely.
Infinity.
We can build one and
recognize those we built, or we can bet that some process computes,
like when saying "yes" to a doctor. But there is no general means to
see if something is a computation or not, and this will depends in
part of we look at it.This remark seems to have an interesting implication: that if I examine some string of code that might happen to be a simulation of a physical system, I will not be able to know which physical system it is. We get universality of computation this way?
Computability is a notion discovered in math. It is related to the key
discovery of Turing (also some others) of the universal (Turing)
machine.But this universality comes with a great price. It abstracts away time and space and all the rest of our local reality.But we have discovered it, and it does not abstract space and time away, it explains the persistent illusion with all possible details. It says only that adding an axiom at that level cannot work.Nature does not need axioms. Donald Hoffman has changed my thinking.
You can defend naturalism, or physicalism, and you have the right to
believe in a primitive physical universe. I am agnostic, and I have to
be, if only because we have not yet decided between Plato and
Aristotle. We are very ignorant, notably on the mind-body question.Umm, your agnosticism does not seem very strong. You defend AR very strongly.No. I debunk invalid argument against it, with some vigor, perhaps.And yes, I do tend to believe that 17 is prime.I get that, you defend viridity. Nature does not. Nature evolves.
I have offered you a sketch of a solution to the mind-body problem and you vigorously attack it with demands for formalism that I cannot write.Only because you are using your informal and unclear ideas to criticize the UDA's consequence.Umm, no. I criticize its assumptions: e.g. That numbers can exist independent of that which they reference.
What if both Plato and Aristotle are wrong?What if you are wrong?I am wrong. I try to correct the errors.
I do not defend computationalism. I just show that IF we assume it,
then we get a constructive and testable platonic theology, which
explains physics. And I have done a piece of the derivation and tested
it.It does not take much to show examples of your defend, Bruno. You are lying to yourself in claiming "I do not defend computationalism." You will not consider any alternative.I thought you defend computationalism also.My case is different. I am agnostic on computationalism. But I study its consequences. it is my job.And, actually, I don't see any other way to even just conceive an alternative.That is a problem: You cannot imagine an alternative.
Your mind is closed. :_(
If you are right on metaphysical naturalism, with a real ontological
universe, then comp is wrong. That is all what I say.Pfft, that is a false dichotomy.Then UDA is flawed.It is not necessary to assume ontological primitives that have some set of properties to the exclusion of others.Then your ontology is amorphous. Nothing can emerge from it, without magic.Magic is when Numbers can exist and have nothing to represent.
You hold onto this dichotomy because it is your tool to defend AR.I need indeed that 2+2=4.
>
> Computation in this sense is a manifestation of teleological entities
> capable of maintaining his internal structure.
I can accept this as a putative truth about a notion of physical
computation, but this has not yet been defined.Why do we need a well founded definition?We don't.I offer a non-well founded definition: Computation is any transformation of Information. Information does not need to be of physical systems; it can be of representational systems: like you favored Sigmas and PA.You can't change the definition. Create a new concept if you want, but computation, or the weaker notion of computability that I need, is well defined by Church thesis."reducing entropy" was
a good try, less wrong than "quantum computation" (despite here Turing
universality is verifiable), but it does not work as nature can
compute without dissipating energy (indeed quantum computers requite
that).Where do you get that rubbish idea?If a quantum computer dissipates energy, the entanglement will propagate from the environment, and the quantum information will be lost. It has been shown (by Landauer and zurel, that only erasing information needs energy, and logicians knows since some work by Hao Wang, in the 1950, (I think) that universal computability can be obtained with machine which never erase memory.(You are Insulting. I take it that you have no argument).Wrong! You are assuming an a priori existing infinite resource: memory.
Quantum computation has been proven to require resources if it is to be evaluated.Locally. because you need to cut. But read and paste does not require it.Only if there is infinite memory available.
Sure, the evolution of the phase is Unitary, but this holds for QM systems in isolation. The only real example of such is the Universe itself.Which would be enough.Good!We get the Wheeler-Dewitt equation with its vanishing of time.This go in the comp direction, although a lot of work remains to have a clearer view on this.I use the isomorphism between the unitary evolution of the wavefunction and a computation.
> Math do not compute.
That does not make a lot of sense.Math performs no actions on its own.OK. Math is not even something that we can defined in math.No self-reference?
> Moreover it is an
> operational definition closer to everyday reality and includes all
> that is traditionally called computer science and biology (and
> sociology) within a wider physical framework.
May be. You did not provide a definition of physical computation. Nor
of "physical", which might help a skeptic like me. The only one you
gave was "reducing entropy". But it does not work. It might work for
life perhaps. It is certainly an interesting idea. But it is not
"computation". You can't change definition at will, or we are talking
about different things. The mathematical notion of computation is NOT
controversial. The physical notion of computation is not even
existing, and most attempts are controversial.The existence of my desktop computer is obvious to me....OK. But that "obviousness" is the mystery we can explain in the comp theory. "obvious" is 1p, and treated in the "& p" hypostases.Umm, OK.
I usually try to start from 'outside of the box's box'.
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A cruise missile is not a computation.
On 25 January 2014 00:17, Bruno Marchal <mar...@ulb.ac.be> wrote:A cruise missile is not a computation.Accroding to comp it is, at least, the result of computations - isn't it? :-)
But generally I would consider a cruise missile to be, if anything other than itself, a message. One I would "return to sender" if possible.
You are a bit non serious here. I have never concluded anything of that kind from computationalism.
Marijuana is good because it is a better medication than the most common one for at least 2000 diseases, according to experts in the field, but this has nothing to do with comp.
Then I allude sometimes about salvia divinorum, for which your remark makes much more sense (but still not as a consequence of comp). It is normal that altering consciousness products or methods can provide information on consciousness.
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Alberto.
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2014-01-24 Bruno Marchal <mar...@ulb.ac.be>You are a bit non serious here. I have never concluded anything of that kind from computationalism.
Marijuana is good because it is a better medication than the most common one for at least 2000 diseases, according to experts in the field, but this has nothing to do with comp.
Then I allude sometimes about salvia divinorum, for which your remark makes much more sense (but still not as a consequence of comp). It is normal that altering consciousness products or methods can provide information on consciousness.So inplicitly you are agreeing with what I told. You would never accept it however.
But don´t worry. That is not bad. It is simply human. To use the desired conclussion
as an starting axiom is natural.
I do not talk about your professional work or your conscious thinking, in which you are correct, but about the influence of you hipothesis in the spontaneous thinking about what is true in apparently unrelated questions where the conscious does not fire the "caution, it is only an hipothesis!" warning.
Most of the thinking is unconscious. That´s why we wake-up with a solution for a problem after sleeping. That is an example of how the individual good (desired outcomes at least) establish what is true.
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