Philosophy, engineering, biology, and history: A vindication of Turing's views about the distinction between the cognitive and physical sciences

Journal of Experimental and Theoretical Artificial Intelligence 14 (1):29-37 (2002)
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Abstract

Alan Turing draws a firm line between the mental and the physical, between the cognitive and physical sciences. For Turing, following a tradition that went back to D=Arcy Thompson, if not Geoffroy and Lucretius, throws talk of function, intentionality, and final causes from biology as a physical science. He likens Amother nature@ to the earnest A. I. scientist, who may send to school disparate versions of the Achild machine,@ eventually hoping for a test-passer but knowing that the vagaries of his experimental course are history and accident

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Author's Profile

Justin Leiber
PhD: University of Chicago; Last affiliation: Florida State University

Citations of this work

Adaptationism.Steven Hecht Orzack - 2010 - Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy.
Dickins, Cosmides, reasoning, modularity, and Wason's task.Justin Leiber - 2005 - Journal for the Theory of Social Behaviour 35 (3):341–349.

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