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Full Idea
The question for a computational-representation theory about the Chinese Room is: is what is happening inside the room functionally equivalent to what is happening inside a normal Chinese speaker?
Gist of Idea
Is the room functionally the same as a Chinese speaker?
Source
Georges Rey (Contemporary Philosophy of Mind [1997], 10.2.1)
Book Ref
Rey,Georges: 'Contemporary Philosophy of Mind' [Blackwell 1997], p.271
A Reaction
Certainly the Room lacks morality ('how can I torture my sister?'). It won't spot connections between recent questions. It won't ask itself questions. It will take years to spot absurd questions.
2427 | Maybe understanding doesn't need consciousness, despite what Searle seems to think [Searle, by Chalmers] |
7389 | A program won't contain understanding if it is small enough to imagine [Dennett on Searle] |
7390 | If bigger and bigger brain parts can't understand, how can a whole brain? [Dennett on Searle] |
5789 | I now think syntax is not in the physics, but in the eye of the beholder [Searle] |
3496 | A program for Chinese translation doesn't need to understand Chinese [Searle] |
3384 | The person couldn't run Searle's Chinese Room without understanding Chinese [Kim] |
3216 | Is the room functionally the same as a Chinese speaker? [Rey] |
3220 | Searle is guilty of the fallacy of division - attributing a property of the whole to a part [Rey] |
2428 | Maybe the whole Chinese Room understands Chinese, though the person doesn't [Chalmers] |
6654 | A computer program is equivalent to the person AND the manual [Lowe] |
7335 | The Chinese Room should be able to ask itself questions in Mandarin [Westaway] |