Lagayascienza wrote: ↑November 5th, 2024, 10:56 pm
Count Lucanor, we disagree about the meaning of "compute" and whether brains do it and how. When your brain performs an arithmetic operation, what is it doing? If I have understood you correctly, you say that the when you perform an arithmetic operation your brain is not computing. I don't understand how you can maintain this line of argument. I'd like to read some scientific papers that demonstrate that brains do not compute?
Actually, we disagree in much more than just one thing. First, it is not our brain performing an arithmetic operation, it is an individual, a living organism, using their senses and the whole machinery of their body in a particular condition where they have to solve a problem. It might seem an irrelevant triviality, but it's necessary to challenge right off the bat the disembodied brain/computing device analogy. Secondly, individuals do perform, consciously, arithmetic computations, but these computations are the result of external operations using a learned syntax, comprising symbols and rules to associate them, with the help of visual and audio cues. When most of us learned how much was 6 x 6, we didn't put into operation an internal mental calculator, we just learned to "sing" the table of six, associated the visual symbols and sounds and understood what a quantity of 36 items means. For more complex operations, famous mathematicians figured out relationships and came up with methods of calculations that also had a syntactic expression in the form of equations. Eventually, we learned to translate the methods and steps of calculations to algorithmic processes and then to mechanical devices, which eventually became the first analog calculators and later the first computers, which owe their existence and operation to the development of math science by humans. So, we should not confuse the fact that both humans and computer perform arithmetic operations with the idea that both are unconsciously running an internal software that performs the calculations "behind curtains". I suspect that is what you and others refer to as "computation".
Third, it's up to the advocates of computationalism to produce scientific papers that demonstrate that brains do compute.
Lagayascienza wrote: ↑November 5th, 2024, 10:56 pm
There's an interesting paper in Nature Communications entitled, “Neural tuning instantiates prior expectations in the human visual system”. In summary, this paper demonstrates that human brains inherently perform calculations akin to high-powered computers through Bayesian inference, enabling precise, swift environmental interpretation. This statistical method melds prior knowledge and new evidence, permitting us to quickly and accurately discern our surroundings. Such revelations could lead to breakthroughs in areas spanning from AI’s machine learning to novel therapeutic strategies in clinical neurology.
I, as many others, seriously doubt the idea of the "Bayesian brain". I will not argue against the technical jargon of this paper, but it seems to me that they have found correlations between empirical data of behavior and simulated models, which they interpret as the result of having an internal statistical machine inside our heads. It's not that we have reverse-engineered brains to come up with that conclusion.
Lagayascienza wrote: ↑November 5th, 2024, 10:56 pm
If some form of computation were not going on in brains, then how would this, and just simple arithmetic operations, be possible. What is occurring in brains if it is not some form of computation? "Digitality" is just a stumbling block. Can we not agree that some form of computation occurs in brains?
As I said, it is important to distinguish between conscious computations and blind, intuitive computations, being the latter what is deemed as the skill simulated in computer devices. The key of the matter, as Searle has pointed out, is that there's no relation between the underlying physics of each system. The assumption from computationalists is that the physical machinery is irrelevant, that what matters is the algorithmic processes, which imply a syntax of underlying binary oppositions (digitality). I seriously doubt that's how our brains actually work.