To people who claim that "thinking and reasoning require language", here is a problem:
Imagine standing at the North Pole of the Earth.
Walk in any direction, in a straight line, for 1 km.
Now turn 90 degrees to the left.
Walk for as long as it takes to pass your starting point.
Have you walked:
1. More than 2xPi km
2. Exactly 2xPi km
3. Less than 2xPi km
4. I never came close to my starting point.
Think about how you tried to answer this question and tell us whether it was based on language.
Just quoting this here in case anything happens to the tweet...I agree with this, however I have one tiny nitpick, feel free to tell me if you think I'm wrong or being overly nitpicky, but the knowledge of the situation in which the phenomenon that he's describing occurs, I learned about entirely from language. So my ability to answer the question is based on that knowledge. I'm aware that the reasoning problem itself doesn't utilise it, but a position and direction system in and of itself arguably also suffers from being insufficient. I suppose I'm wondering if "setup" counts as needing language model? |
It may be a decent challenge, probably still not an actual rebuttal, of "language is sufficient for all thinking and reasoning", but "X is required for Y" and "X is sufficient for everything encompassed by Y" are very different claims.