It occurs to me that although I have made clear that I (1) favor naive functionalism and (2) am far from certain of it, I haven’t actually made clear that I further (3) know of no situation where I think the agent has a good picture of the world and where the agent’s picture leads it to conclude that there’s a logical correlation with its action which can’t be accounted for by a logical cause (ie something like a copy of the agent somewhere in the computation of the correlated thing). IE, if there are outright counterexamples to naive functionalism, I think they’re actually tricky to state, and I have at least considered a few cases—your attempted counterexample comes as no surprise to me and I suspect you’ll have to try significantly harder.
My uncertainty is, instead, in the large ambiguity of concepts like “instance of an agent” and “logical cause”.
It occurs to me that although I have made clear that I (1) favor naive functionalism and (2) am far from certain of it, I haven’t actually made clear that I further (3) know of no situation where I think the agent has a good picture of the world and where the agent’s picture leads it to conclude that there’s a logical correlation with its action which can’t be accounted for by a logical cause (ie something like a copy of the agent somewhere in the computation of the correlated thing). IE, if there are outright counterexamples to naive functionalism, I think they’re actually tricky to state, and I have at least considered a few cases—your attempted counterexample comes as no surprise to me and I suspect you’ll have to try significantly harder.
My uncertainty is, instead, in the large ambiguity of concepts like “instance of an agent” and “logical cause”.