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@MooingDuck Actually, it's in a C compiler.
> language: C (gcc-4.3.4)
char const*.
@RMartinhoFernandes I forgot C could use <string.h> as a header :/ thought it had to be in quotes
The .h is usually a clue
Ell
Ell
damnit im back again -.-
@MooingDuck Woah, no. C is different from C++, but not that different.
23:03
I had an interesting problem once with a project that was trying to use a local version of a header that also existed in the lib directory. We couldn't access it using #include <> nor #include ""
@user1244215 if it's not in the CWD, you have to add the include path, either in the compiler flags or in the source itself (I prefer source)
Ewww, paths hardcoded in the source?
@MooingDuck How would you add it to the include path in the source itself?
Bah, we ended up renaming the file. There's no way of prefering the environment INCLUDE to the command line specified ones
@Maxpm #include "../../otherproject/includes/headername.h"
23:06
Ewwwww.
@MooingDuck Oh, I see.
I draw the line just before using .. in includes
And yeah, that's gross.
off topic but if anyone knows javascript, can they please come to the javascript room for two minutes, it will be quick
@RMartinhoFernandes at my company, they like to duplicate projects, so we have 3+ copies of each header, each slightly different. specific header includes addressed that problem
@user1244215 that can be addressed by passing the source root as an include path I think.
23:07
@user1244215 I do use .., but I never go out of the same project tree.
no one?
@RMartinhoFernandes Why is that problematic?
@RMartinhoFernandes our projects share some headers, and duplicate others :/ Relative paths were the best quickfix
@Maxpm int[10] carries more information than int*.
@MooingDuck Personally, I would have used symlinks for the ones that shared headers.
23:09
The silent conversion between the two destroys important information, namely, the size.
@RMartinhoFernandes Right. So?
Oh, you're saying that C++'s pointer decay is bad?
Ah.
Array decay. Pointers are already dead.
Basically int* to mean "array" is bad because it has no means of telling the size.
23:10
@RMartinhoFernandes still the only way of handling dynamic arrays though.
@MooingDuck Don't you use int* + int or int* + int* for that?
(Aka, std::vector)
It's utterly stupid that you can't get size information out of a dynamic array.
When the implementation has to store it anyway, otherwise delete[] wouldn't work.
Ell
Ell
that is pretty stupid. never thought about that
@CatPlusPlus I can't do without pointers
This is cool: telnet towel.blinkenlights.nl
@RMartinhoFernandes yes, but that requires int* to represent an array internally
23:12
What'd you need pointers for?
Ell
Ell
If I don't have pointers I get confused. I don't need to use them, Its just if they arent there I cant tell when im passing by value/reference
if a Turing machine has infinite time and memory
@CatPlusPlus internals under the pointer/array wrappers
is that countably or uncountably infinite?
23:12
@Ell That's what & is for.
Ell
Ell
Hmm okay.
@DeadMG I think it's countable.
Ell
Ell
Actually we need pointers for storing in vectors. I'm sure they are useful. We need some kind of nullable type, don't we?
@Ell and changable, yes, it needs pointers
Sometimes.
23:14
There are no cells between two adjacent cells.
So it can be counted like the natural numbers, I think.
@RMartinhoFernandes seems a solid argument to me
I never got the infinity counting thing.
Over my head.
curious
that would seem to directly refute the Chinese Room thought experiment, then
If you start at a specific position in the tape, let's say S, you can map any position into the set of natural numbers by mapping S to 0, S+n to n*2 and S-n to n*2+1.
@DeadMG I don't follow that.
23:17
@DeadMG the memory is fundamentally linear and discrete, so it has to be countably infinite as there's a trivial mapping to the integers
@DeadMG I can't see the link either.
the Chinese Room experiment posits that, given X Chinese input, you give out Y Chinese and therefore pretend to speak Chinese
Same goes for the time, assuming you measure it in operations/instrucitons
this is, effectively a lookup table, right?
I mean, just to make sure I'm not misunderstanding the experiment
@DeadMG that's only half of it, but I don't think the other half is relevant
@DeadMG effectively, yes
23:18
right
@DeadMG No, the experiment assumes an unspecified transformation.
> WM_GESTURE: retrieve all fingers?
Not necessarily a lookup table.
but it's trivial to prove that such a thing isn't capable of pretending to speak Chinese
@DeadMG no, it's trivial to prove that such a thing isn't capable of understanding Chinese.
23:19
consider (the Chinese equivalent of) "Did you visit <insert place here>?" "Yes" "What was your favourite place?"
there is no transformation from the input "What was your favourite place" to a suitable answer
because the context requires that you know the previous messages
> Suppose that there is a program that gives a computer the ability to carry on an intelligent conversation in written Chinese.
@DeadMG the general thought experiment does not preclude remembering context/previous messages.
in order to keep it up, infinitely, you would have to know the infinite previous messages
You're supposed to suppose such a thing is possible.
@DeadMG which a Turing machine can do.
23:21
and the number of potential "conversations" is uncountably infinite
not countably infinite
@DeadMG oh, with that assumption, then yes, your argument is valid (assuming a lookup table). I don't recall you wording that before.
@MooingDuck The number of conversations is uncountably infinite. It's the same proof as the decimal diagonal proof for the number of decimals being uncountably infinite. Just replace 0-9 with all the letters of the Chinese alphabet
Crazy math talk.
@CatPlusPlus I thought I got the infinity counting thing, until I came up with a proof that it's wrong. I must conclude I did not correctly understand the infinity counting proof.
Right, i'm off to bed for a finite and countable amount of sleep
nn all
23:23
You're assuming the Chinese room experiment is ran with a Turing machine.
so it would be impossible for a Turing-complete program with only countably infinite memory to pretend to understand Chinese
@DeadMG I can see how that applies
Ell
Ell
somebody make me sleeeeep
@Ell benedril
You're also assuming that all sentences and sequences of sentences make sense in an intelligent conversation in Chinese.
23:24
sure
but I'm equally sure that even discarding those, you'd still be left with an uncountable infinity
I don't know Chinese, so let's pretend it's English. The experiment doesn't depend on any specific characteristic of Chinese.
There is a finite number of English words.
Call that number W.
but if you accept infinite words, then there are uncountably infinite arrangements of them
@RMartinhoFernandes there is not a finite number of English phrases
Now assign each word with a number from 0 to W-1.
just the same that if you accept infinite decimal places... there are an uncountably infinite number of decimals
23:26
You don't need to know all English phrases to speak English.
Each sentence becomes a number in base W.
Proof: humans.
@MooingDuck There is not a finite number of numbers either. I just need to prove you can map 1-to-1 between them.
@DeadMG so long as you don't allow sentences of infinite length, your set of all possible sentences is countably infinite
@RMartinhoFernandes yeah, that seems to hold
23:28
@DeadMG Sure, but that's an assumption that doesn't match the description.
(Unless there is indeed an infinite number of Chinese words, which I doubt)
for a start, each sentence can have infinite length
because it's a sentence, not a single word
@DeadMG Not in an intelligent conversation.
@je4d and if you limit words to 1000 characters, then its not infinite at all
@DeadMG don't confuse infinite with finite but unbounded
there's nothing saying that you can't shove through the works of Shakespeare and say "So what did you think?"
23:28
@DeadMG That's not infinite.
Just a very large number.
if you allow an infinite sentence, there is no obligation for your machine to respond to it as it'll never finish receiving it
so you can only sensibly consider finite sentences
@je4d you can if you speak infinitely fast. :D
And those are countable.
@je4d If you understood Chinese and you tried to read an infinite book, then you would never finish it. That doesn't mean you don't understand Chinese.
halting can be an acceptable outcome
man, I hate trying to reason about infinity
@DeadMG me too :/
23:31
@DeadMG That's not a conversation!
I wish netbeans would blink or something when it hits a breakpoint and it doesn't have focus. I keep wondering why my program freezes and find out later it was because it hit a breakpoint I set the day before.
@RMartinhoFernandes The hypothetical reader still has to understand it.
I believe that a conversation implies finite messages.
a conversation can definitely be infinitely long
@DeadMG that's a lecture
23:33
anyone here good with combinatorics
lols
you might convince me that the sentence length can't be infinite, though
@DeadMG And those are countable.
the whole countable/uncountable infinities thing never made much sense to me
Only infinite messages make it uncountable, but as I argued above, that doesn't make for intelligent conversation.
@RMartinhoFernandes I'm not so sure about that
23:34
@DeadMG the infinite messages bit, or the intelligent conversation bit?
if I say that each "sentence" maps to an integer as you previously described, then I don't see how a conversation of infinite integers is any more countable than a decimal expressed as infinite integers
and Cantor's diagonal argument applies equally here
@DeadMG It's clear from the original argument that it assumes finite messages.
but a person who wishes to understand Chinese, in the most general case, can cope with infinite messages
@DeadMG only one, and only if they have an infinite life!
@DeadMG People don't have infinite memories.
23:38
infinity is confusing if you think of it as a number
Does that make them non-intelligent?
sure, but that's a limitation of their hardware, not the facility of the understanding of Chinese, which is the salient point
I'm working from the assumption that people display intelligence.
Not language processing.
@DeadMG The argument is about the emulation of minds by machines.
what about it
like the blue brain project
?
we can already simulate basic mammalian brains in terms of their neuron circuitry just fine
@RMartinhoFernandes The argument is about whether or not a machine can ever understand Chinese
23:41
define understand
logically, two machines with countably infinite time and memory, which did understand Chinese, could undertake a conversation in Chinese infinitely
> The Chinese Room argument, devised by John Searle, is an argument against the possibility of true artificial intelligence.
whereas the machine with any given translation would require uncountably infinite memory
@DeadMG That's not required for the argument.
@DeadMG I think the difference there is that an "infinite integer" isn't an easy concept to define, it's very different from an infinitely precise real number, so Cantor's diagonal doesn't apply equally
23:43
the Chinese room argument I think is extraordinarily weak
people just don't like to think of themselves as elaborate biological machines
"understanding" a language is not much different from "simulating the ability to" use said language
indistinguishable in terms of the inputs and outputs
@WhatsInAName have you actually read about the CHinese argument? (DeadMG's descriptions are very misleading)
yes
IMO it's more philosophical than anything
@WhatsInAName so you think if you followed the instructions on teh screen that the box you're in understands Chinese?
My cubicle sure is a good programmer
Searl defines Strong AI in terms of human intelligence. While intelligence that exceeds that of humans is conceivable, it is not what he is considering.
IMO it's a loaded question
23:47
@WhatsInAName that statement makes me think you didn't understand the thought experiment.
The Chinese language algorithm is the "understanding"
@WhatsInAName Of course it's philosophical.
I understand the thought experiment perfectly fine
Again, people have trouble understanding that we are basically a sum total of various functions/algorithms at work
to say we "understand" something is no functionally different than saying "all the algorithms we use are capable of performing some task given inputs"
@WhatsInAName actually, that is an angle I hadn't considered. I'll think on it
@WhatsInAName That's your view.
23:49
It's the "only" view unless you're a spiritual type, lol
The fundamental unwritten assumption of Searle's argument is that humans are doing something more than "simulating the ability to understand <x>"
right
Which is BS unless you're a man of science
@WhatsInAName s/unless/if/?
@WhatsInAName There are many men of science that disagree with you.
Well there are many scientists who believe in a personal God too -- doesn't make them any less kooky
23:50
@je4d probably
Point is that we already understand that human intelligent is the sum of all the various components of the brain
causally linked to the brain -- and demonstrably so
@WhatsInAName no, there's still a fair amount of debate there
@WhatsInAName Doesn't make a dent in their arguments per se.
No, there's really not any debate there
It's "false" debate stirred up by ignorant counter-controversy
@WhatsInAName and string theorists and quantum mechanic-people
23:51
@WhatsInAName You are not willing to have any.
I am perfectly willing to debate
You think intelligence is somehow external or causally disconnected from the brain?
You're going to have a hell of a time defending that
I don't know.
oh dear, this is getting religious.. I'm going to get out of here before things move on to Tabs vs Spaces
nn all
Ooh, we're getting bold.
Okay but that's just argument from personal incredulity
23:52
@WhatsInAName again: quantum mechanics makes that fuzzier than one would hope.
No it doesn't!
@WhatsInAName namely, your brain being influenced by things that don't exist.
That isn't how QM works exactly
@WhatsInAName no, I admit to stretching that, but it's not clear cut either.
@WhatsInAName It's not an argument. It's a fact. I don't know because I haven't yet seen conclusive proof in any direction.
I'm not willing to discard conclusions from the get go.
23:54
Okay but again this is standard garden-variety argument from ignorance you're defending here
MIT just recently discovered how memories are stored, physically, even
Neuroscience is fairly clear in how human actions are comprised
It's all traceable to the train
*brain
How does the brain work?
posted on April 03, 2012 by Herb Sutter

Motti asked: While you’re dealing with reader’s Qs…. In your keynote in “Going Native” you mentioned that type inference should almost always be used, except for some obscure cases with expression templates. Yes. To give people context, the idea is when declaring local variables, prefer to use auto to deduce the type. For example: This [...]

Wrought forth over millions of years of evolution
@WhatsInAName no, he's saying he won't make conclusions based on his own ignorance. That's a perfectly valid position.
Oh, then yes
But he should not make that conclusion for others
Or act as if there is any "real" serious debate about the question
in the same way you get people acting as if there is a "real" serious debate between evolution and.... well, nonsense
23:56
@WhatsInAName no, there's really no debate for that one :/
anyways to answer the earlier question
I don't know what "real" in quotes means.
asking "how does the brain work" is like asking "how does a computer work"
it's not some simple answer
I also don't know what you mean by "serious".
but the point is that there are many pieces at work that do different things
there's no evidence that human intelligence is affected by something "external" to the brain's components itself
it's perfectly explainable in evolutionary terms
Otherwise you must address at what point along the evolutionary timeline something "else" got involved
It becomes untenable
anyways don't want to turn this into some religious debate so i shall stfu now
23:59
@WhatsInAName oh, we're stopping? ok
@WhatsInAName If you look back you're the one that has been mentioning religion.
I've been trying to discuss "artificial intelligence".
@RMartinhoFernandes je4d did first
Which is the topic of the Chinese room argument.
I am saying that it is hard to get into the Chinese room argument debate without getting into religious territory
Because the question is fundamentally philosophical by its nature

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