I think it’s both in the map, as a description, but I also think the behavior itself is in the territory, and my point is that you can get the same result but have different paths to get to the result, which is in the territory.
Also, I treat the map-territory difference in a weaker way than LW often assumes, where things in the map can also be in the territory, and vice versa.
A function in this context is a computational abstraction. I would say this is in the map.
I think it’s both in the map, as a description, but I also think the behavior itself is in the territory, and my point is that you can get the same result but have different paths to get to the result, which is in the territory.
Also, I treat the map-territory difference in a weaker way than LW often assumes, where things in the map can also be in the territory, and vice versa.