Any physical system that, as best you can infer, behaves with a known isomorphism to integer math.
**ETA: Oops, see zero_call’s correction; following the article, integer math actually corresponds to some widely-held conception—within human brains—of how numbers work. Since Tyrrell_McAllister’s point was that I was slipping in non-physicality, the rest of the exchange is still relevant, though.
Any physical system that, as best you can infer, behaves with a known isomorphism to integer math.
So, to make the pure physicality of all referents clear, should we label that node:
Physical system S outputs the string ‘4’ whenever it is fed the string ‘2+2=’
where S is the name of a specific concrete physical system such that the string ‘2+2=’ physically makes S output ‘4’ in a way that is isomorphic to the way that the rules of arithmetic logically imply that 2+2=4?
Yes, basically. I mean, I’d tweak it to read something more like
Physical system Sis regarded as outputting ‘4’ when interpreted per a specific known isomorphism M, whenever the query ‘2+2=’ is converted per M and applied to it.
but I don’t think that impacts whatever point you were trying to make.
I think that your tweak makes an important difference. And, if I may be so bold, I think that you want something closer to what I wrote :).
I’m trying to make good your claim that the causal diagram refers only to physical things. But your label refers to M, which is an isomorphism. What is the concrete physical referent of “M”?
I think that your tweak makes an important difference. And, if I may be so bold, I think that you want something closer to what I wrote :).
Why? The constraint that a system output a “string” is too strict; it suffices that they output something interpretable as a string.
I’m trying to make good your claim that the causal diagram refers only to physical things. But your label refers to M, which is an isomorphism. What is the concrete physical referent of “M”?
An isomorphism M is a one-to-one mapping between two phenomena X and Y. In this context, then, the physical referent of M is whatever physically encodes how to identify what in Y it is that the aspects of X map to.
Why? The constraint that a system output a “string” is too strict; it suffices that they output something interpretable as a string.
I agree now that “string” is too strict. I should have said “symbol”, where a symbol is anything with physical tokens. My proposed label is now
Physical system S outputs the symbol A whenever it is fed the symbol B
where
“S” is the name of a specific concrete physical system, and
“A” and “B” are the names of specific physically-manifested symbols,
such that a token of the symbol A physically makes S output a token of the symbol B in a way that is isomorphic to the way that the rules of arithmetic logically imply that 2+2=4.
I think that the work that you want to do by adding the word “interpretable” to the label is done by my conditions on what S, A, and B are.
An isomorphism M is a one-to-one mapping between two phenomena X and Y. In this context, then, the physical referent of M is whatever physically encodes how to identify what in Y it is that the aspects of X map to.
Then you should be able to make the label refer directly to that physical encoding of M. That is, instead of mentioning the isomorphism M, you ought to be able to refer just to some specific physical system T that “encodes” M in the same way that my physical system S above encodes the operation of adding 2 to 2.
However, if you’re still unhappy with my label, then you would probably be unhappy with this unpacking of your reference to M. But I can think of no other way to make good your claim to refer only to physical things.
(A strict platonist would say that even my label refers to nonphysical things, because it refers to symbols, only the tokens of which are physical. I’m happy to ignore this.)
Then you should be able to make the label refer directly to that physical encoding of M. … you ought to be able to refer just to some specific physical system T that “encodes” M … if you’re still unhappy with my label, then you would probably be unhappy with this unpacking of your reference to M. But I can think of no other way to make good your claim to refer only to physical things.
Well, I would need to permit more than just one physical encoding; I’d need to permit any physical encoding that is, er, isomorphic to an arbitrary one of them. But I don’t see this as being a problem—it’s like what they do with NP-completeness. You can select one (arbitrary) problem as being NP-complete, and then define NP-completeness as “that problem, plus any one convertible to it”.
So it appears I can avoid binding the meaning to one specific physical system, while still using only physical referents. And yes, your updated terminology is fine as long as you allow “symbols” and “fed” to have sufficiently broad meanings.
Incidentally, are you saying the same problem arises for defining “waves”? Do you think that referring to one particular wave requires you to reference something non-physical? Would you say waves are partly non-physical?
M as an isomorphism is just an interpretation between things (rocks, birds, etc.) and “math things” (numbers, etc.) Its physical referent is the human mental instantiation of that interpretation (e.g., in the form of neutro transmitters or what have you.) However, (see my comment a little above), I don’t think this is what you were getting at.
No, I thought the physical referent for the integer math was something like “Human mental instantiation of an idea that is reasonably agreed upon.” I believe you are referring to the physical referent of the preimage of the isomorphism (i.e., the physical system itself. A somewhat redundant thing to call a referent, since it is actually the explicit meaning of the statement.)
Any physical system that, as best you can infer, behaves with a known isomorphism to integer math.
**ETA: Oops, see zero_call’s correction; following the article, integer math actually corresponds to some widely-held conception—within human brains—of how numbers work. Since Tyrrell_McAllister’s point was that I was slipping in non-physicality, the rest of the exchange is still relevant, though.
So, to make the pure physicality of all referents clear, should we label that node:
where S is the name of a specific concrete physical system such that the string ‘2+2=’ physically makes S output ‘4’ in a way that is isomorphic to the way that the rules of arithmetic logically imply that 2+2=4?
Yes, basically. I mean, I’d tweak it to read something more like
but I don’t think that impacts whatever point you were trying to make.
I think that your tweak makes an important difference. And, if I may be so bold, I think that you want something closer to what I wrote :).
I’m trying to make good your claim that the causal diagram refers only to physical things. But your label refers to M, which is an isomorphism. What is the concrete physical referent of “M”?
Why? The constraint that a system output a “string” is too strict; it suffices that they output something interpretable as a string.
An isomorphism M is a one-to-one mapping between two phenomena X and Y. In this context, then, the physical referent of M is whatever physically encodes how to identify what in Y it is that the aspects of X map to.
I agree now that “string” is too strict. I should have said “symbol”, where a symbol is anything with physical tokens. My proposed label is now
where
“S” is the name of a specific concrete physical system, and
“A” and “B” are the names of specific physically-manifested symbols,
such that a token of the symbol A physically makes S output a token of the symbol B in a way that is isomorphic to the way that the rules of arithmetic logically imply that 2+2=4.
I think that the work that you want to do by adding the word “interpretable” to the label is done by my conditions on what S, A, and B are.
Then you should be able to make the label refer directly to that physical encoding of M. That is, instead of mentioning the isomorphism M, you ought to be able to refer just to some specific physical system T that “encodes” M in the same way that my physical system S above encodes the operation of adding 2 to 2.
However, if you’re still unhappy with my label, then you would probably be unhappy with this unpacking of your reference to M. But I can think of no other way to make good your claim to refer only to physical things.
(A strict platonist would say that even my label refers to nonphysical things, because it refers to symbols, only the tokens of which are physical. I’m happy to ignore this.)
Well, I would need to permit more than just one physical encoding; I’d need to permit any physical encoding that is, er, isomorphic to an arbitrary one of them. But I don’t see this as being a problem—it’s like what they do with NP-completeness. You can select one (arbitrary) problem as being NP-complete, and then define NP-completeness as “that problem, plus any one convertible to it”.
So it appears I can avoid binding the meaning to one specific physical system, while still using only physical referents. And yes, your updated terminology is fine as long as you allow “symbols” and “fed” to have sufficiently broad meanings.
Incidentally, are you saying the same problem arises for defining “waves”? Do you think that referring to one particular wave requires you to reference something non-physical? Would you say waves are partly non-physical?
M as an isomorphism is just an interpretation between things (rocks, birds, etc.) and “math things” (numbers, etc.) Its physical referent is the human mental instantiation of that interpretation (e.g., in the form of neutro transmitters or what have you.) However, (see my comment a little above), I don’t think this is what you were getting at.
No, I thought the physical referent for the integer math was something like “Human mental instantiation of an idea that is reasonably agreed upon.” I believe you are referring to the physical referent of the preimage of the isomorphism (i.e., the physical system itself. A somewhat redundant thing to call a referent, since it is actually the explicit meaning of the statement.)
You’re right, I agree. I was being inconsistent with my article there.