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by Twisol 3099 days ago
If something can do anything, than the way in which it can do _any_ thing doesn't much tell you how it does one _particular_ thing. In contrast, a mechanical clock can be inspected, and the way in which it tells time can be understood by its construction.
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So, w.r.t to Pitt's research, proving that the brain could compute anything (like a Turing machine) does not help in understanding how it does one particular thing, for e.g. language?
Kind of. It's not the idea that the brain is a Turing machine that's the problem -- I think it's fairly well established that given enough scratch paper, a human _could_ manually execute an algorithm for any computable function. The problem is more specifically that in Pitt's model, all of the behavioral work is offloaded to the abstract logic, leaving none for the physical wetware. Of course, today we know that the brain does have quite a bit of physical structure, and we have learned a lot about how the brain functions by looking at these structures.