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Single Idea 3174
[filed under theme 18. Thought / B. Mechanics of Thought / 3. Modularity of Mind
]
Full Idea
Grammatical sensitivity is in no way a physical property of the stimulus, and we can't imagine how to build a device which would produce grammatical structures in response to the environment.
Gist of Idea
Good grammar can't come simply from stimuli
Source
Georges Rey (Contemporary Philosophy of Mind [1997], 4.3)
Book Ref
Rey,Georges: 'Contemporary Philosophy of Mind' [Blackwell 1997], p.126
A Reaction
You could try to program it with a set of (say) Aristotelian categories, and mechanisms to sort the environment accordingly. It then has to query its database, in response to practical needs. A doddle.
The
14 ideas
with the same theme
[theory of separate units of the mind/brain]:
7845
|
When we need to do something, we depute an inner servant to remind us of it
[Proust]
|
2491
|
Modules have encapsulation, inaccessibility, private concepts, innateness
[Fodor]
|
2497
|
Something must take an overview of the modules
[Fodor]
|
2495
|
Obvious modules are language and commonsense explanation
[Fodor]
|
2499
|
Modules analyse stimuli, they don't tell you what to do
[Fodor]
|
2498
|
Modules make the world manageable
[Fodor]
|
2496
|
Blindness doesn't destroy spatial concepts
[Fodor]
|
2500
|
Babies talk in consistent patterns
[Fodor]
|
2507
|
Rationality rises above modules
[Fodor]
|
2509
|
Modules have in-built specialist information
[Fodor]
|
22186
|
Mental modules are specialised, automatic, and isolated
[Fodor, by Okasha]
|
3171
|
Children speak 90% good grammar
[Rey]
|
3174
|
Good grammar can't come simply from stimuli
[Rey]
|
4928
|
Brain complexity balances segregation and integration, like a good team of specialists
[Edelman/Tononi]
|