| > 1. Clearly false (what words do you use when you plan to throw a ball to a target?) That's physical, not abstract. Our entire body's neural net is used to develop those physical skills. When it comes time to catch or throw a ball, no abstract thinking is involved, just doing. If you want to study the physics of throwing a ball, then you need abstract thought, but not for just practicing it. > 2. There is no reason to believe other animals are incapable of abstract thinking (although we can clearly see they are far less intelligent) And there is reason to believe they're capable of abstract thinking? > 3. I don't know what your long screed about bigotry and religion has to do with language ability Because we communicate abstract ideas to one another via language. Once we acquire a mind-topic, we can then focus on it, as per our desire and mental focusability. That's why programming is so difficult. But we can also contemplate our moral basis with respect to another mind-topic that teaches us how to abstractly evaluate it. It can be called religion or ethics or whatever. But we navigate our choices against whatever we deem permissible or impermissible, desirable or repellant. And we can self-evolve that basis against which we make our choices. It's an essential aspect of human nature, and it requires abstract concepts such as compassion, harm, happiness, sadness, kindness and anger, to name but a few. > Just imagine how slow university-level maths would be if you had to do all the thinking in words in your head. Just imagine how uni-level maths would be if there were no abstract concepts being taught with actual words. Are you saying that not only did your maths education only use diagrams, but that no verbal explanation was involved? > Sorry if I sound rude, but this is such a common misconception people believe in, and it's so blatantly not true so I'm baffled people keep on claiming it is 'scientific' to believe that language is identical to intelligence. It's not rude, but it is just wrong. For one, I never said it was identical to intelligence. Intelligence is evaluating an abstract concept net to attempt to evaluate how a particular concept relates to it. Abstract concepts are built on the same logical network that facilitates our ability to process and produce language. How we build and utilize our ever-evolving network results in abilities that we call intelligence. > No wonder some people insist LLMs are just weeks away from becoming AGIs. That's not me, brother. I'm not even on the LLM hype train, much less think they're going to facilitate AGI. They probably have a few niche uses, but that's my take on all the LLM stuff. |
Abstraction is about generalising beyond the physical objects we experience. The ability to understand the physics behind how objects work is abstract, but it's a low enough level of abstraction that even simple animals are capable of it.
> Just imagine how uni-level maths would be if there were no abstract concepts being taught with actual words.
Language is pretty good for communication, obviously.
> Are you saying that not only did your maths education only use diagrams, but that no verbal explanation was involved?
My driving test also used language to convey the lesson. But I don't talk to myself before I decide which direction to turn the wheel...
> Abstract concepts are built on the same logical network that facilitates our ability to process and produce language.
Overlap, certainly. Anything else is conjecture.