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Showing papers in "Philosophical Investigations in 1988"


Journal ArticleDOI
Alan R. White1

21 citations



Journal ArticleDOI
John Churchill1

7 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Searle's Chinese Room argument is a general argument that proves that machines do not have mental states in virtue of their programming as discussed by the authors, and the argument expresses powerful but mistaken intuitions about understanding and the first person point of view.
Abstract: Searle's Chinese Room argument is a general argument that proves that machines do not have mental states in virtue of their programming. I claim that the argument expresses powerful but mistaken intuitions about understanding and the first person point of view. A distinction is drawn between a competence sense and a performance sense of ‘understanding texts’. It is argued that the Chinese Room intuition looks for a special experience (performance) of comprehension, whereas artificial intelligence is attempting to explain the knowledge (competence) required to understand texts. Moreover, a dilemma is sketched for the argument: either Searle hasn't identified the appropriate subject of understanding or he may understand after all. Finally, I question the underlying assumption that the general definition of mental states requires a projectable-by-us first person point of view.

3 citations


Journal ArticleDOI

3 citations



Journal ArticleDOI

2 citations


Journal ArticleDOI

1 citations