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by ICBTheory
331 days ago
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Hey all,
apologies for the delayed response.
I was on a flight, then had guests, then had to make some rapid decisions involving actual real-world complexity (the kind that is not easily tokenized). I’ve now had time to read through the thread properly, and I appreciate the range of engagement—even the sharp-edged stuff. Below, I’ve gathered a set of structured responses to the main critique clusters that came up. |
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This is the classical foundational syllogism of computationalism. In short:
This seems elegant, tidy, logically sound. And: it is patently false — at step 3… And this common mistake is not technical, but categorical: Simulating a system’s physical behavior is not the same as instantiating its cognitive function.The flaw is in the logic — it’s nothing less than a category error. The logic breaks exactly where category boundaries are crossed without checking if the concept still applies. That by no means inference, this is mere wishful thinking in formalwear. It happens when you confuse simulating a system with being the system. It’s in the jump from simulation to instantiation.
Yes, we can simulate water. -> No, the simulation isn’t wet.
Yes, I can “simulate” a fridge. ->But if I put a beer in myself, and the beer doesn’t come out cold after some time,then what we’ve built is a metaphor with a user interface, not a cognitive peer.
And yes: we can simulate Einstein discovering special relativity. -> But only after he’s already done it. We can tokenize the insight, replay the math, even predict the citation graph. But that’s not general intelligence, that’s a historical reenactment, starring a transformer with a good memory.
Einstein didn’t run inference over a well-formed symbol set. He changed the set, reframed the problem from within the ambiguity. And that is not algorithmic recursion, is it? Nope… That’s cognition at the edge of structure.
If your model can only simulate the answer after history has solved it, then congratulations: you’ve built a cognitive historian, not a general intelligence.