Searle's celebrated Chinese Room Argument has shaken the foundations of Artificial Intelligence. Many refutations have been attempted, but none seem convincing. This paper is an attempt to sort out explicitly the assumptions and the logical, methodological and empirical points of disagreement. Searle is shown to have underestimated some features of computer modeling, but the heart of the issue turns out to be an empirical question about the scope and limits of the purely symbolic (computational) model of the mind. Nonsymbolic modeling turns out to be immune to the Chinese Room Argument. The issues discussed include the Total Turing Test, modularity, neural modeling, robotics, causality and the symbol-grounding problem
Harnad's main argument can be roughly summarised as follows: due to Searle's ...
Perhaps the most famous critic of computational theories of mind is John Searle. His best-known work...
Whether human thinking can be formalized and whether machines can think in a human sense are questio...
Searle (1980) in his Chinese Room thought experiment sets out to show that a purely formalist accoun...
“Could a machine think?” asks John R. Searle in his paper Minds, Brains, and Programs. He answers th...
Are computers and minds alike? In computer functionalism, also known as strong AI, it is believed th...
Detractors of Searle’s Chinese Room Argument have arrived at a virtual consensus that the mental pro...
Searle's Chinese Room Argument showed a fatal flaw in computationalism (the idea that mental states ...
Abstract: The Chinese room thought experiment of John Searle militates against strong artificial int...
Searle's Chinese Room Argument showed a fatal flaw in computationalism ...
Advocates of strong artificial intelligence believe that properly programmed computers can go beyond...
The most famous challenge to the aims of cognitive science and artificial intelligence is the philos...
The Chinese Room argument shows that the Turing test functions only by syntax, thereby revealing tha...
This paper is a follow-up of the first part of the persons reply to the Chinese Room Argument. The f...
Since Hobbes, thinking has been described as computation. The creation of digital computers provided...
Harnad's main argument can be roughly summarised as follows: due to Searle's ...
Perhaps the most famous critic of computational theories of mind is John Searle. His best-known work...
Whether human thinking can be formalized and whether machines can think in a human sense are questio...
Searle (1980) in his Chinese Room thought experiment sets out to show that a purely formalist accoun...
“Could a machine think?” asks John R. Searle in his paper Minds, Brains, and Programs. He answers th...
Are computers and minds alike? In computer functionalism, also known as strong AI, it is believed th...
Detractors of Searle’s Chinese Room Argument have arrived at a virtual consensus that the mental pro...
Searle's Chinese Room Argument showed a fatal flaw in computationalism (the idea that mental states ...
Abstract: The Chinese room thought experiment of John Searle militates against strong artificial int...
Searle's Chinese Room Argument showed a fatal flaw in computationalism ...
Advocates of strong artificial intelligence believe that properly programmed computers can go beyond...
The most famous challenge to the aims of cognitive science and artificial intelligence is the philos...
The Chinese Room argument shows that the Turing test functions only by syntax, thereby revealing tha...
This paper is a follow-up of the first part of the persons reply to the Chinese Room Argument. The f...
Since Hobbes, thinking has been described as computation. The creation of digital computers provided...
Harnad's main argument can be roughly summarised as follows: due to Searle's ...
Perhaps the most famous critic of computational theories of mind is John Searle. His best-known work...
Whether human thinking can be formalized and whether machines can think in a human sense are questio...