In the 1960s, the philosophers J.R. Lucas and Paul Benacerraf presented arguments against mechanism, the thesis that minds can be simulated by Turing machines. Instead of discussing Turing machines directly, they shift their focus to using Gödel's incompleteness theorems to show that theories of classical first-order logic could not represent minds. They believed that these arguments about logical theories implied that the mechanistic thesis for Turing machines was incorrect. However, I show that their arguments are insufficient to topple the mechanistic thesis for Turing machines. I then present a new argument, focused directly on Turing machines, that seeks to show that mechanism is false. The argument is reminiscent of the halti...
Many important lines of argumentation have been presented during the last decades claiming that mach...
Abstract. Friedrich von Hayek’s The Sensory Order (1952) presents a physicalist identity theory of t...
We shall present some relations between consistency and reflection principles which explain why is G...
Can the human mind be properly described in mechanical terms? It is in order to demonstrate that it ...
In this paper Lucas comes back to Gödelian argument against Mecanism to clarify some points. First o...
In this article, Lucas maintains the falseness of Mechanism - the attempt to explain minds as machin...
This paper is a critical essay on the question "Can machines think?", with particular attention paid...
Due to his significant role in the development of computer technology and the discipline of artifici...
Many important lines of argumentation have been presented during the last decades claiming that mach...
Classical computationalism considers the Turing Machine to be a psychologically implausible model of...
Due to his significant role in the development of computer technology and the discipline of artifici...
Turing's celebrated 1950 paper proposes a very general methodological criterion for modelling m...
Can a Turing Machine simulate the human mind? If the Church-Turing thesis is assumed to be true, the...
In 1949, the Department of Philosophy at the University of Manchester organized a symposium ...
Gödel's theorem is consistent with the computationalist hypothesis. Roger Penrose, however, cla...
Many important lines of argumentation have been presented during the last decades claiming that mach...
Abstract. Friedrich von Hayek’s The Sensory Order (1952) presents a physicalist identity theory of t...
We shall present some relations between consistency and reflection principles which explain why is G...
Can the human mind be properly described in mechanical terms? It is in order to demonstrate that it ...
In this paper Lucas comes back to Gödelian argument against Mecanism to clarify some points. First o...
In this article, Lucas maintains the falseness of Mechanism - the attempt to explain minds as machin...
This paper is a critical essay on the question "Can machines think?", with particular attention paid...
Due to his significant role in the development of computer technology and the discipline of artifici...
Many important lines of argumentation have been presented during the last decades claiming that mach...
Classical computationalism considers the Turing Machine to be a psychologically implausible model of...
Due to his significant role in the development of computer technology and the discipline of artifici...
Turing's celebrated 1950 paper proposes a very general methodological criterion for modelling m...
Can a Turing Machine simulate the human mind? If the Church-Turing thesis is assumed to be true, the...
In 1949, the Department of Philosophy at the University of Manchester organized a symposium ...
Gödel's theorem is consistent with the computationalist hypothesis. Roger Penrose, however, cla...
Many important lines of argumentation have been presented during the last decades claiming that mach...
Abstract. Friedrich von Hayek’s The Sensory Order (1952) presents a physicalist identity theory of t...
We shall present some relations between consistency and reflection principles which explain why is G...