The above toy model assumed that we’re picking one signal at a time, and that each such “signal” specifies the intended behavior for all organs simultaneously...
… But you’re right that the underlying assumption there was that the set of possible desired behaviors is discrete (i. e., that X in “kidneys do X” is a discrete variable, not a vector of reals). That might’ve indeed assumed me straight out of the space of reasonable toy models for biological signals, oops.
The above toy model assumed that we’re picking one signal at a time, and that each such “signal” specifies the intended behavior for all organs simultaneously...
… But you’re right that the underlying assumption there was that the set of possible desired behaviors is discrete (i. e., that X in “kidneys do X” is a discrete variable, not a vector of reals). That might’ve indeed assumed me straight out of the space of reasonable toy models for biological signals, oops.