{"id":14021,"date":"2012-05-17T15:37:00","date_gmt":"2012-05-17T20:37:00","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.catholiconnection.com\/2012\/05\/perks-of-the-enlightenment-cripples-walk.html"},"modified":"2012-05-17T15:37:00","modified_gmt":"2012-05-17T20:37:00","slug":"perks-of-the-enlightenment-cripples-walk","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/jonhaines.com\/philosophy\/perks-of-the-enlightenment-cripples-walk\/","title":{"rendered":"Perks of the &#8220;Enlightenment&#8221;&#8211;Cripples Walk"},"content":{"rendered":"<div dir=\"ltr\" style=\"text-align: left\">\n<div dir=\"ltr\" style=\"text-align: left\">\n<div class=\"separator\" style=\"clear: both;text-align: center\"><a href=\"http:\/\/www.catholiconnection.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/blogger\/-ysISnYOI0gU\/T7Uy5saTIkI\/AAAAAAACIk8\/kryCiwkj8kY\/s1600\/TzxKT.jpeg\" style=\"clear: right;float: right;margin-bottom: 1em;margin-left: 1em\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" border=\"0\" height=\"200\" src=\"http:\/\/www.catholiconnection.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/blogger\/-ysISnYOI0gU\/T7Uy5saTIkI\/AAAAAAACIk8\/kryCiwkj8kY\/s200\/TzxKT.jpeg\" width=\"138\" \/><\/a><\/div>\n<p>In the &#8220;enlightenment&#8221;, in fact the claim to enlightenment is the idea that we will now focus on the stuff that really matters&#8230;the mechanical the manipulation of matter to for technology&#039;s sake, leaving behind our concern for abstract non &#039;empirically verifiable concepts such as &#039;the good&#039;. It was believed, more and more often that all things that take place everywhere even our experience itself is totally explainable in terms of the matter underlying to the process&#8230;even mental activity.<\/p>\n<p>Before I get off on too much of a rant, the purpose of this post is to show one of the wonderful perks of the &#8220;enlightenment&#8221;&#8212;technology is growing incredibly fast, though the world without certain goods can still grow incredibly dark. As explained in our previous post on <a href=\"http:\/\/www.battleforthecoreoftheworld.com\/2012\/04\/ultimate-promise-of-enlightenment.html\">transhumanism<\/a>, who needs religious or miraculous healers when the empirical sciences (we) can do it for ourselves? Be proud humanists, we will conquer the universe!<\/p>\n<p>No but seriously, this is pretty cool.<\/p>\n<p>Ecce!<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<p>That&#039;s the main part anyways, but I wanted to reblog a post recently <a href=\"http:\/\/edwardfeser.blogspot.com\/2012\/05\/kripke-contra-computationalism.html\">written by Prof. Feser<\/a>&nbsp;for those that want a more in depth commentary on materialism and consciousness:<\/p>\n<blockquote class=\"tr_bq\">\n<div style=\"background-color: white;clear: both;font-family: arial, sans-serif;margin-bottom: 0px;margin-left: 0px;margin-right: 0px;margin-top: 0px;text-align: center\"><a href=\"http:\/\/www.catholiconnection.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/blogger\/-YMbxh1QIhkQ\/T6nzS9dqhJI\/AAAAAAAAAe8\/hhZuFWvQ39o\/s1600\/Kripke%2Band%2Bfriend.jpg\" style=\"clear: left;color: #1155cc;float: left;margin-bottom: 1em;margin-right: 1em\" target=\"_blank\"><img decoding=\"async\" border=\"0\" src=\"http:\/\/www.catholiconnection.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/blogger\/-YMbxh1QIhkQ\/T6nzS9dqhJI\/AAAAAAAAAe8\/hhZuFWvQ39o\/s1600\/Kripke%2Band%2Bfriend.jpg\" style=\"border-bottom-width: 0px;border-color: initial;border-left-width: 0px;border-right-width: 0px;border-style: initial;border-top-width: 0px\" \/><\/a><\/div>\n<div style=\"background-color: white;font-family: arial, sans-serif;margin-bottom: 0px;margin-left: 0px;margin-right: 0px;margin-top: 0px;text-align: -webkit-auto\"><span style=\"line-height: 14px\">That the brain is a digital computer and the mind the software run on the computer are theses that seem to many to be confirmed by our best science, or at least by our best science fiction.&nbsp;&nbsp;<a href=\"http:\/\/edwardfeser.blogspot.com\/2012\/02\/popper-contra-computationalism.html\" style=\"color: #1155cc\" target=\"_blank\">But we recently looked<\/a>&nbsp;at some arguments from Karl Popper, John Searle, and others that expose serious (indeed, I would say fatal) difficulties with the computer model of the mind.&nbsp; Saul Kripke presents another such argument.&nbsp; It is not well known.&nbsp; It was hinted at in a footnote in his famous book&nbsp;<i><a href=\"http:\/\/www.amazon.com\/Wittgenstein-Rules-Private-Language-Elementary\/dp\/0674954017\/ref=sr_1_4?s=books&amp;ie=UTF8&amp;qid=1336328083&amp;sr=1-4\" style=\"color: #1155cc\" target=\"_blank\">Wittgenstein on Rules and Private Language<\/a><\/i>&nbsp;(<i>WRPL<\/i>) and developed in some unpublished lectures.&nbsp; But Jeff Buechner\u2019s recent article \u201cNot Even Computing Machines Can Follow Rules: Kripke\u2019s Critique of Functionalism\u201d offers a very useful exposition of Kripke\u2019s argument.&nbsp; (You can find Buechner\u2019s article in Alan Berger\u2019s anthology&nbsp;<i><a href=\"http:\/\/www.amazon.com\/Saul-Kripke-Alan-Berger\/dp\/0521674980\/ref=sr_1_2?s=books&amp;ie=UTF8&amp;qid=1336328083&amp;sr=1-2\" style=\"color: #1155cc\" target=\"_blank\">Saul Kripke<\/a><\/i>.)<\/span><\/div>\n<p><a href=\"http:\/\/www.blogger.com\/blogger.g?blogID=2993119803199947397\" name=\"more\" style=\"background-color: white;color: #1155cc;font-family: arial, sans-serif;text-align: -webkit-auto\" target=\"_blank\"><\/a><\/p>\n<div style=\"background-color: white;font-family: arial, sans-serif;margin-bottom: 0.0001pt;margin-left: 0px;margin-right: 0px;margin-top: 0px;text-align: -webkit-auto\"><span style=\"line-height: 14px\">Though it is, I think, not essential to Kripke\u2019s argument, the \u201cquus\u201d paradox developed in&nbsp;<i>WRPL<\/i>&nbsp;provides a helpful way of stating it (and, naturally, is made use of by Kripke in stating it in&nbsp;<i>WRPL<\/i>).&nbsp; So let\u2019s briefly take a look at that.&nbsp; Imagine you have never computed any numbers as high as 57, but are asked to compute \u201c68 + 57.\u201d&nbsp; Naturally, you answer \u201c125,\u201d confident that this is the arithmetically correct answer, but confident also that it accords with the way you have always used \u201cplus\u201d in the past, i.e. to denote the addition function, which, when applied to the numbers you call \u201c68\u201d and \u201c57,\u201d yields 125.&nbsp; But now, Kripke says, suppose that an odd skeptic asks you how you are so sure that this is really what you meant in the past, and thus how you can be certain that \u201c125\u201d is really the correct answer.&nbsp; Maybe, he suggests, the function you really meant in the past by \u201cplus\u201d and \u201c+\u201d was not addition, but rather what Kripke calls the \u201cquus\u201d function, which he defines as follows:<\/span><\/div>\n<div style=\"background-color: white;font-family: arial, sans-serif;margin-bottom: 0.0001pt;margin-left: 0px;margin-right: 0px;margin-top: 0px;text-align: -webkit-auto\"><\/div>\n<div style=\"background-color: white;font-family: arial, sans-serif;margin-bottom: 0.0001pt;margin-left: 0px;margin-right: 0px;margin-top: 0px;text-align: -webkit-auto\"><span style=\"line-height: 14px\">x quus y = x + y, if x, y &lt; 57;<\/span><\/div>\n<div style=\"background-color: white;font-family: arial, sans-serif;margin-bottom: 0.0001pt;margin-left: 0px;margin-right: 0px;margin-top: 0px;text-align: -webkit-auto\"><span style=\"line-height: 14px\">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; &nbsp; = 5 otherwise.<\/span><\/div>\n<div style=\"background-color: white;font-family: arial, sans-serif;margin-bottom: 0.0001pt;margin-left: 0px;margin-right: 0px;margin-top: 0px;text-align: -webkit-auto\"><\/div>\n<div style=\"background-color: white;margin-bottom: 0.0001pt;margin-left: 0px;margin-right: 0px;margin-top: 0px;text-align: -webkit-auto\"><span style=\"line-height: 14px\"><span style=\"font-family: arial, sans-serif\">So, maybe you have always been carrying out \u201cquaddition\u201d rather than addition, since quadding and adding will always yield the same result when the numbers are smaller than 57.&nbsp; That means that now that you are computing \u201c68 + 57,\u201d the correct answer should be \u201c5\u201d rather than \u201c125.\u201d&nbsp; And maybe you think otherwise only because you are now misinterpreting all your previous uses of \u201cplus.\u201d&nbsp; Of course, this seems preposterous.&nbsp; But how do you know the skeptic is wrong? <\/span><span><b>[Well&#8230;.]<\/b><\/span><\/span><\/div>\n<div style=\"background-color: white;font-family: arial, sans-serif;margin-bottom: 0.0001pt;margin-left: 0px;margin-right: 0px;margin-top: 0px;text-align: -webkit-auto\"><\/div>\n<div style=\"background-color: white;margin-bottom: 0.0001pt;margin-left: 0px;margin-right: 0px;margin-top: 0px;text-align: -webkit-auto\"><span style=\"line-height: 14px\"><span style=\"font-family: arial, sans-serif\">Kripke\u2019s skeptic holds that any evidence <\/span><span><b>[Keyword, what type?]<\/b><\/span><span style=\"font-family: arial, sans-serif\"> you have that what you always meant was addition is evidence that is consistent with your really having meant quaddition.&nbsp; For example, it is no good to note that you have always said \u201cTwo plus two equals four\u201d and never \u201cTwo quus two equals four,\u201d because what is in question is what you meant<\/span><i style=\"font-family: arial, sans-serif\">&nbsp;<\/i><span style=\"font-family: arial, sans-serif\">by \u201cplus.\u201d&nbsp; Perhaps, the skeptic says, every time you said \u201cplus\u201d you meant \u201cquus,\u201d and every time you said \u201caddition\u201d you meant \u201cquaddition.\u201d&nbsp; Neither will it help to appeal to memories of what was consciously going through your mind when you said things like \u201cTwo plus two equals four.\u201d&nbsp; Even if the words \u201cI mean&nbsp;<\/span><i style=\"font-family: arial, sans-serif\">plus<\/i><span style=\"font-family: arial, sans-serif\">&nbsp;by \u2018plus,\u2019 and not \u2018quus\u2019!\u201d had passed through your mind, that would only raise the question of what you meant by<\/span><i style=\"font-family: arial, sans-serif\">that<\/i><span style=\"font-family: arial, sans-serif\">.&nbsp;<\/span><\/span><\/div>\n<div style=\"background-color: white;font-family: arial, sans-serif;margin-bottom: 0.0001pt;margin-left: 0px;margin-right: 0px;margin-top: 0px;text-align: -webkit-auto\"><\/div>\n<div style=\"background-color: white;font-family: arial, sans-serif;margin-bottom: 0.0001pt;margin-left: 0px;margin-right: 0px;margin-top: 0px;text-align: -webkit-auto\"><span style=\"line-height: 14px\">Note that it is irrelevant that most of us have in fact computed numbers higher than 57.&nbsp; For any given person, there is always some number, even if an extremely large one, equal to or higher than which he has never calculated, and the skeptic can always run the argument using that number instead.&nbsp; Notice also that the point can be made about what you mean&nbsp;<i>now<\/i>&nbsp;by \u201cplus.\u201d&nbsp; For all of your current linguistic behavior and the words you are now consciously running through your mind, the skeptic can ask whether you mean by it addition or quaddition.&nbsp;<\/span><\/div>\n<\/blockquote>\n<blockquote class=\"tr_bq\">\n<div style=\"background-color: white;font-family: arial, sans-serif;margin-bottom: 0.0001pt;margin-left: 0px;margin-right: 0px;margin-top: 0px;text-align: -webkit-auto\"><\/div>\n<div style=\"background-color: white;margin-bottom: 0px;margin-left: 0px;margin-right: 0px;margin-top: 0px;text-align: -webkit-auto\"><span style=\"line-height: 14px\"><span style=\"font-family: arial, sans-serif\">Now, Kripke\u2019s \u201cquus\u201d puzzle famously raises all sorts of questions in the philosophy of language and philosophy of mind.&nbsp; This is not the place to get into all that, and Kripke\u2019s argument against functionalism does not, I think, stand or fall with any particular view about what his \u201cquus\u201d paradox ultimately tells us about human thought and language. &nbsp;<\/span><\/span><b>[If you have been asking yourself, why is he talking about this? Now he is getting to the point.]&nbsp;<\/b><span style=\"font-family: arial, sans-serif;line-height: 14px\">The point for our purposes is that the \u201cquus\u201d example provides a useful illustration of how material processes can be indeterminate between different functions.&nbsp; (An Aristotelian-Thomistic philosopher like myself, by the way, is happy to allow that mental imagery &#8212; such as the entertaining of visual or auditory mental images of words like \u201cplus\u201d or sentences like \u201cI mean&nbsp;<\/span><i style=\"font-family: arial, sans-serif;line-height: 14px\">plus<\/i><span style=\"font-family: arial, sans-serif;line-height: 14px\">, not quus!\u201d &#8212; is as material as bodily behavior is.&nbsp; From an A-T point of view, among the various activities often classified by contemporary philosophers as \u201cmental,\u201d it is only&nbsp;<\/span><i style=\"font-family: arial, sans-serif;line-height: 14px\">intellectual&nbsp;<\/i><span style=\"font-family: arial, sans-serif;line-height: 14px\">activity in the strict sense &#8212; activity that involves the grasp of&nbsp;<\/span><i style=\"font-family: arial, sans-serif;line-height: 14px\">abstract concepts<\/i><span style=\"font-family: arial, sans-serif;line-height: 14px\">, and is irreducible to the entertaining of mental images &#8212; that is immaterial.&nbsp; And that is crucial to understanding how an A-T philosopher would approach Kripke\u2019s argument.&nbsp; But again, that is a topic for another time.)<\/span><\/div>\n<div style=\"background-color: white;font-family: arial, sans-serif;margin-bottom: 0px;margin-left: 0px;margin-right: 0px;margin-top: 0px;text-align: -webkit-auto\"><\/div>\n<div style=\"background-color: white;font-family: arial, sans-serif;margin-bottom: 0px;margin-left: 0px;margin-right: 0px;margin-top: 0px;text-align: -webkit-auto\"><span style=\"line-height: 14px\">Kripke\u2019s \u201cquus\u201d example can be used to state his argument about computationalism as follows.&nbsp; <b>Whatever we say about what&nbsp;<i>we<\/i>&nbsp;mean when we use \u201cplus,\u201d there are no physical features of a&nbsp;<i>computer&nbsp;<\/i>that can determine whether&nbsp;<i>it<\/i>&nbsp;is carrying out addition or quaddition, no matter how far we extend its outputs.<\/b>&nbsp; No matter what the past behavior of a machine has been, we can always suppose that its next output &#8212; \u201c5,\u201d say, when calculating numbers larger than any it has calculated before &#8212; might show that it is carrying out something like quaddition rather than addition.&nbsp; Of course, it might be said in response that if this happens, that would just show that the machine was&nbsp;<i>malfunctioning<\/i>&nbsp;rather than performing quaddition.&nbsp; But Kripke points out that whether some output counts as a malfunction itself depends on what program the machine is running, and whether the machine is running the program for addition rather than quaddition is precisely what is in question.&nbsp;&nbsp;<\/span><\/div>\n<div style=\"background-color: white;font-family: arial, sans-serif;margin-bottom: 0px;margin-left: 0px;margin-right: 0px;margin-top: 0px;text-align: -webkit-auto\"><\/div>\n<div style=\"background-color: white;font-family: arial, sans-serif;margin-bottom: 0px;margin-left: 0px;margin-right: 0px;margin-top: 0px;text-align: -webkit-auto\"><span style=\"line-height: 14px\">Another way to put the point is that the question of what program a machine is running a<b>lways involves&nbsp;<i>idealization<\/i>.<\/b>&nbsp; In any actual machine, gears get stuck, components melt, and in myriad other ways the machine fails perfectly to instantiate the program we say it is running.&nbsp; <b>But there is nothing in the physical features or operations of the machine&nbsp;<i>themselves<\/i>&nbsp;that tells us that it has failed perfectly to instantiate its idealized program.<\/b>&nbsp; <b>For relative to an eccentric program, even a machine with a stuck gear or melted component could be doing exactly what it is supposed to be doing, and a gear that&nbsp;<i>doesn\u2019t&nbsp;<\/i>stick or a component that&nbsp;<i>doesn\u2019t&nbsp;<\/i>melt could count as malfunctioning.&nbsp; Hence there is nothing in the behavior of a computer, considered by itself, that can tell us whether its giving \u201c125\u201d in response to \u201cWhat is 68 + 57?\u201d counts as an instance of its following an idealized program for addition, or instead as a malfunction in a machine that is supposed to be carrying out an idealized program for quaddition.<\/b>&nbsp; And there is nothing in the behavior of a computer, considered by itself, that could tell us whether giving \u201c5\u201d in response to \u201cWhat is 68 + 57?\u201d counts as a malfunction in a machine that is supposed to be carrying out an idealized program for addition, or instead as an instance of properly following an idealized program for quaddition.<\/span><\/div>\n<div style=\"background-color: white;font-family: arial, sans-serif;margin-bottom: 0px;margin-left: 0px;margin-right: 0px;margin-top: 0px;text-align: -webkit-auto\"><\/div>\n<div style=\"background-color: white;font-family: arial, sans-serif;margin-bottom: 0px;margin-left: 0px;margin-right: 0px;margin-top: 0px;text-align: -webkit-auto\"><span style=\"line-height: 14px\">As Buechner points out, i<b>t is no good<\/b> to appeal to counterfactuals to try to get around the problem &#8212; to claim, for example, that what the machine would have done had it not malfunctioned is answer \u201c125\u201d rather than \u201c5.\u201d&nbsp; For such a counterfactual presupposes that the idealized program the machine is instantiating is addition rather than quaddition, which is precisely what is in question.&nbsp;<\/span><\/div>\n<div style=\"background-color: white;font-family: arial, sans-serif;margin-bottom: 0px;margin-left: 0px;margin-right: 0px;margin-top: 0px;text-align: -webkit-auto\"><\/div>\n<div style=\"background-color: white;margin-bottom: 0px;margin-left: 0px;margin-right: 0px;margin-top: 0px;text-align: -webkit-auto\"><span style=\"line-height: 14px\"><b style=\"font-family: arial, sans-serif\">Naturally, we could always ask the programmer of the machine what&nbsp;<i>he<\/i>&nbsp;had in mind.&nbsp; But that simply reinforces the point that there is nothing in&nbsp;<i>the physical properties of the machine itself<\/i>&nbsp;that can tell us.<\/b><span style=\"font-family: arial, sans-serif\">&nbsp;<\/span><span><b>[Exactly. Including in this case above with an attached robotic arm. The translation of biological output into useful electronic\/magnetic input for the machine contains no semblance of intelligence and I dare say this would even be the case with a simulated brain, if there could be such a thing. It would only do what it was created to do, rather than be able to have creativity\/freedom.] <\/b><\/span><span style=\"font-family: arial, sans-serif\">But if there is nothing intrinsic to computers in general that determines what programs they are running, neither is there anything intrinsic to the human brain specifically, considered as a kind of computer, that determines what program&nbsp;<\/span><i style=\"font-family: arial, sans-serif\">it&nbsp;<\/i><span style=\"font-family: arial, sans-serif\">is running (if it is running one in the first place).&nbsp; Hence there can be no question of explaining the human mind in terms of programs running in the brain.<\/span><\/span><\/div>\n<div style=\"background-color: white;font-family: arial, sans-serif;margin-bottom: 0px;margin-left: 0px;margin-right: 0px;margin-top: 0px;text-align: -webkit-auto\"><\/div>\n<div style=\"background-color: white;font-family: arial, sans-serif;margin-bottom: 0px;margin-left: 0px;margin-right: 0px;margin-top: 0px;text-align: -webkit-auto\"><span style=\"line-height: 14px\">Might we appeal to God as the programmer of the brain who determines which program it is running?&nbsp; Obviously most defenders of the computer model of the mind would not want to do this, since they tend to be materialists and materialists tend to be atheists.&nbsp; <b>But it is not a good idea in any case.&nbsp; For that would make of human thought something as extrinsic to human beings as the program a computer is running is extrinsic to a computer, indeed as extrinsic as the meaning of a sentence is to the sentence.&nbsp;<\/b> Just as the meaning of \u201cThe cat is on the mat\u201d is not really in the sounds, ink marks, or pixels in which the sentence is realized, but rather in the mind of the user or hearer of the sentence, so too the idea of God as a kind of programmer or user of the brain qua computer would entail that the meanings of our thought processes are not really in us at all but only in Him.&nbsp; The result would be a new riff on occasionalism that is even more bizarre than&nbsp;<a href=\"http:\/\/edwardfeser.blogspot.com\/2011\/05\/are-you-for-real.html\" style=\"color: #1155cc\" target=\"_blank\">the usual kind<\/a>&nbsp;&#8212; a version on which it is really God who is, strictly speaking, doing all our thinking for us!<\/span><\/div>\n<div style=\"background-color: white;font-family: arial, sans-serif;margin-bottom: 0px;margin-left: 0px;margin-right: 0px;margin-top: 0px;text-align: -webkit-auto\"><\/div>\n<div style=\"background-color: white;font-family: arial, sans-serif;margin-bottom: 0px;margin-left: 0px;margin-right: 0px;margin-top: 0px;text-align: -webkit-auto\"><span style=\"line-height: 14px\">Neither, as Buechner points out, will it do to suggest that natural selection has determined that we are following one program rather than another.&nbsp; For any program we conjecture natural selection has put into us, there is going to be an alternative program with equal survival value, and the biological facts will be indeterminate between them.&nbsp; There will be no reason in principle to hold that it is the one program that natural selection put into us rather than the other.<\/span><\/div>\n<div style=\"background-color: white;font-family: arial, sans-serif;margin-bottom: 0px;margin-left: 0px;margin-right: 0px;margin-top: 0px;text-align: -webkit-auto\"><\/div>\n<div style=\"background-color: white;font-family: arial, sans-serif;margin-bottom: 0px;margin-left: 0px;margin-right: 0px;margin-top: 0px;text-align: -webkit-auto\"><span style=\"line-height: 14px\">Suppose we say instead that there is what Buechner calls a \u201ctelos in Nature\u201d that determines that the brain really is following this program rather than that &#8212; the program for addition, say, rather than quaddition?&nbsp; <b>In that case we would have some end or purpose&nbsp;<i>intrinsic<\/i>&nbsp;to the natural world that determines which program the brain instantiates, which would eliminate the occasionalist problem the appeal to God as programmer raised.&nbsp; (Of course, you could give a Fifth Way style argument for God as the ultimate explanation of this intrinsic telos, but that would not be to make of God a \u201cprogrammer\u201d in the relevant sense,&nbsp;<a href=\"http:\/\/edwardfeser.blogspot.com\/2010\/05\/id-versus-t-roundup.html\" style=\"color: #1155cc\" target=\"_blank\">any more than<\/a>&nbsp;<\/b>Aquinas\u2019s Fifth Way makes of God a Paley-style tinkerer.)<\/span><\/div>\n<div style=\"background-color: white;font-family: arial, sans-serif;margin-bottom: 0px;margin-left: 0px;margin-right: 0px;margin-top: 0px;text-align: -webkit-auto\"><\/div>\n<div style=\"background-color: white;font-family: arial, sans-serif;margin-bottom: 0px;margin-left: 0px;margin-right: 0px;margin-top: 0px;text-align: -webkit-auto\"><span style=\"line-height: 14px\">Buechner himself is not sympathetic to this \u201ctelos in Nature\u201d suggestion, but it is, naturally, one that an Aristotelian is bound to take seriously.&nbsp; But it does not help the advocate of the computer model of the mind, at least not if he is a materialist.&nbsp; For to affirm that there is teleology intrinsic in nature is just to abandon the materialist\u2019s conception of matter and return to something like the Aristotelian-Scholastic conception that materialists, like other modern philosophers, thought they had buried forever back in the days of Hobbes and Descartes.&nbsp;&nbsp;<\/span><\/div>\n<div style=\"background-color: white;font-family: arial, sans-serif;margin-bottom: 0px;margin-left: 0px;margin-right: 0px;margin-top: 0px;text-align: -webkit-auto\"><\/div>\n<div style=\"background-color: white;font-family: arial, sans-serif;margin-bottom: 0px;margin-left: 0px;margin-right: 0px;margin-top: 0px;text-align: -webkit-auto\"><span style=\"line-height: 14px\">Still, if the computer model of the mind&nbsp;<a href=\"http:\/\/edwardfeser.blogspot.com\/2009\/01\/computers-minds-and-aristotle.html\" style=\"color: #1155cc\" target=\"_blank\">leads people to reconsider Aristotelianism<\/a>, it can\u2019t be&nbsp;<i>all<\/i>&nbsp;bad.&nbsp; (Cf. James Ross\u2019s&nbsp;<a href=\"http:\/\/www.sas.upenn.edu\/~jross\/aristotlesrevenge.htm\" style=\"color: #1155cc\" target=\"_blank\">\u201cThe Fate of the Analysts: Aristotle\u2019s Revenge: Software Everywhere\u201d<\/a>)<\/span><\/div>\n<\/blockquote>\n<p>Well said.<\/p>\n<p>When it comes to explaining why the materialist account of consciousness cannot work, it&#039;s hard to beat John Searle&#039;s&nbsp;<a href=\"http:\/\/en.wikipedia.org\/wiki\/Chinese_room\">Chinese Room argument<\/a>.<\/p>\n<p><\/div>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>In the &#8220;enlightenment&#8221;, in fact the claim to enlightenment is the idea that we will now focus on the stuff that really matters&#8230;the mechanical the manipulation of matter to for technology&#039;s sake, leaving behind our concern for abstract non &#039;empirically verifiable concepts such as &#039;the good&#039;. It was believed, more and more often that all [&#8230;]\n","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":14909,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[11],"tags":[263,264,55,265,266,189,68,10,267,7],"class_list":["post-14021","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","has-post-thumbnail","hentry","category-philosophy","tag-alan-berger","tag-aristotelian-scholastic","tag-empiricism","tag-james-ross","tag-john-searle","tag-karl-popper","tag-modern-science","tag-philosophy","tag-saul-kripke","tag-thomas-aquinas"],"jetpack_featured_media_url":"","_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/jonhaines.com\/philosophy\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/14021","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/jonhaines.com\/philosophy\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/jonhaines.com\/philosophy\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/jonhaines.com\/philosophy\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/1"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/jonhaines.com\/philosophy\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=14021"}],"version-history":[{"count":0,"href":"https:\/\/jonhaines.com\/philosophy\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/14021\/revisions"}],"wp:featuredmedia":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/jonhaines.com\/philosophy\/wp-json\/"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/jonhaines.com\/philosophy\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=14021"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/jonhaines.com\/philosophy\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=14021"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/jonhaines.com\/philosophy\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=14021"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}