[sci.logic] SUNY Buffalo Logic Colloquium: Nelson

rapaport@cs.Buffalo.EDU (William J. Rapaport) (10/20/88)

                         UNIVERSITY AT BUFFALO
                      STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK

                        BUFFALO LOGIC COLLOQUIUM
                  GRADUATE GROUP IN COGNITIVE SCIENCE
                                  and
   GRADUATE RESEARCH INITIATIVE IN COGNITIVE AND LINGUISTIC SCIENCES

                                PRESENT

                           RAYMOND J. NELSON

                  Truman Handy Professor of Philosophy
                    Case Western Reserve University

         CHURCH'S THESIS, CONNECTIONISM, AND COGNITIVE SCIENCE

                      Wednesday, November 16, 1988
                               4:00 P.M.
                     684 Baldy Hall, Amherst Campus

The Church-Turing Thesis (CT) is a  central  principle  of  contemporary
logic  and  computability  theory as well as of cognitive science (which
includes philosophy of mind).  As a mathematical  principle,  CT  states
that  any  effectively  computable  function of non-negative integers is
general recursive; in computer and cognitive-science  terms,  it  states
that  any  effectively algorithmic symbolic processing is Turing comput-
able, i.e., can be carried out by an  idealized  stored-program  digital
computer  (one with infinite memory that never fails or makes mistakes).
In this form, CT is essentially an empirical principle.

Many cognitive scientists have adopted the working hypothesis  that  the
mind/brain  (as  a  cognitive organ) is some sort of algorithmic symbol-
processor.  By CT, it follows that the mind/brain  is  (or  realizes)  a
system of recursive rules.  This may be interpreted in two ways, depend-
ing on two types of algorithm, free or embodied.  A  free  algorithm  is
represented  by  any  program; an embodied algorithm is one built into a
network (such as an ALU unit or a neuronal group).

CT is being challenged by connectionism, which asserts that many  cogni-
tive  processes,  including  perception  in  particular,  are not symbol
processes, but rather subsymbol  processes  of  entities  that  have  no
literal semantic interpretation.  These are parallel, distributed, asso-
ciative memory processes totally unlike  serial,  executive-driven,  von
Neumann  computers.   CT is also being challenged by evolutionism, which
is a form of connectionism that  denies  that  phylogenesis  produces  a
mind/brain  adapted  to  fixed  categories or distal stimuli (even fuzzy
ones).  Computers deal only with fixed  categories  (either  in  machine
language,   codes   such  as  ASCII,  or  declarations  in  higher-level
languages).  So, if connectionists are right, CT is  false:   there  are
processes that are provably (I will suggest a proof) effective and algo-
rithmic but are not Turing-computable.

However, if CT in empirical form is true, and if the processes  involved
are  effective, then connectionism or, in general, anti-computationalism
is false.

A direct argument that does not appeal to CT but that tends  to  confirm
it is that embodied algorithm networks as a matter of fact are parallel,
distributed, associative, and subsymbolic even in von Neumann computers,
not  to  say  super-multiprocessors.  Finally, I claim that the embodied
algorithm network models are not only _not_ antithetical to evolutionism
but  dovetail nicely with the theory that the mind/brain evolves through
the life of the individual.

REFERENCES

Edelman, G. (1987), _Neural Darwinism_ (Basic Books).
Nelson R. J. (1988), ``Connections among  Connections,''  _Behavioral  &
Brain Sci._ 11.
Smolensky, P. (1988), ``On  the  Proper  Treatment  of  Connectionism,''
_Behavioral & Brain Sci._ 11.

There will be an evening discussion at a time and place to be announced.

Contact John Corcoran, Department of Philosophy,  636-2444  for  further
information.