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- Newsgroups: comp.ai.philosophy
- Path: sparky!uunet!spool.mu.edu!agate!iat.holonet.net!ken
- From: ken@iat.holonet.net (Ken Easlon)
- Subject: Re: grounding and the entity/environment boundary
- Message-ID: <BzyK19.2B5@iat.holonet.net>
- Organization: HoloNet National Internet Access BBS: 510-704-1058/modem
- References: <k19gwB5w165w@cybernet.cse.fau.edu>
- Date: Mon, 28 Dec 1992 07:12:44 GMT
- Lines: 93
-
-
- In article <k19gwB5w165w@cybernet.cse.fau.edu> ,
- tomh@cybernet.cse.fau.edu (Tom Holroyd) writes:
-
- >ken@iat.holonet.net (Ken Easlon) writes:
-
- >> The point at which the soup becomes part of me is open to debate:
- >>
- >> when it's in the bowl
- >> when it's in the spoon
- >> when it's in my mouth
- >> when it's in my stomach
- >> when it's been digested, and it's molecules intertwine with mine
-
- >I suggest (in a functional style):
- > When the soup first modifies your behavior.
- >(E.g. when you spot the soup on the shelf in the market, it's part of you.
-
- >Or when you make out the shopping list, and think "I'm going to buy/cook
- >soup," the soup has already modified your behavior, and is part of you.)
-
- I agree that the very thought of soup does affect my mental configuration,
- but I think there's a difference between the thought and soupy substance.
-
- It seems to shaping up something like this.
-
- As an eating entity, the soup has to be more or less irreversibly on it's
- way into my stomach before it becomes part of me.
-
- As a soup stocking entity, the soup has to be in the cupboard to fulfill my
- functional obligations. I still feel silly saying the soup in the cupboard
- is part of me, but it's definitely mine. I guess if we talk about a
- functional enterprise , it's Me and My Private Soup Supply, Inc, a legal
- entity.
-
- As a soup locating entity, I must know how to go about finding soup with a
- fair degree of success. I don't have to know the exact location of the
- soup on the store shelf, but I must know the location of enough stores, and
- have sufficient transportation and financial resources to insure the
- success of any soup procurement mission. I think in this situation the
- soup is part of the environment of Me an My Private Soup Supply, Inc, but
- it may be part of the entity Soupville, USA.
-
- This all seems to be re-enforcing article <29744@castle.ed.ac.uk> ,
- in which cam@castle.ed.ac.uk (Chris Malcolm) writes:
-
- >A better basis (for drawing the entity environment boundary) seems to be
- >to base it on the notion of ownership, which is decided on the basis of
- >current and historical experience of successful command. This permits
- >the inclusion without ambiguity of tools both sensory and effector,
- >since there are many kinds of ownership.
-
- Any function is going to require access to resources, which can be
- described as ownership of resources.
-
- If we use the usual definition of ownership, no actual usage of the
- resource is required. However, if you subscribe to the notion of "use it
- or loose it", then I suppose there's not really a lot of difference between
- a functioning ownership and ownership of the means of functioning.
-
-
- But wait, I just remembered an old thought of mine, the distinction of
- resource and user, like car and driver.
-
- Successful action in the world requires me to be able to make plans and
- acquire and use skills. A couple of primary resources I use in this task
- are my mind and my body. Since I use my mind and my body quite often, and
- for so many different things, I think of them as more than peripheral
- resources, I think of them as a part of me.
-
- On the other hand, things like computers and cars, and cans of soup, are
- more in the nature of peripheral tools. Things that are mine, but not me.
-
- OK, we've got three categories. The owner, the owned, and the unowned (or
- other owned). The user, the tools, the thing being worked on. Entity,
- interface, environment.
-
- Returning from dinner back to the world of AI, the AI entity would be
- required to have sufficient computational and S/E resources to successfully
- command it's S/E extensions, but I wouldn't necessarily call the extensions
- part of the entity or the environment, hence interface.
-
- In keeping with the functional definition of entity, it must be able to
- successfully do the job it was designed for by being able to successfully
- operate a mixed variety of S/E extensions.
-
-
- --
- Ken Easlon | "...somebody spoke and I went into a dream..."
- ken@holonet.net | -Paul McCartney
- Pleasantly Unaffiliated |
-
-
-