Peter Koellner: On the Question of Whether the Mind Can be Mechanized
Lecture Title:On the Question of Whether the Mind Can be Mechanized Speaker: Prof. Peter Koellner (Havard University, USA) Date and Time: 2021-04-21, 9:30am-11:30am Beijing Time Platform: Zoom Abstract: In this talk I will discuss the question of whether Gödel's incompleteness theorems imply that "the mind cannot be mechanized". The story begins with Gödel. He argued for a weaker, disjunctive conclusion to the effect that the incompleteness theorems imply that either "the mind cannot be mechanized" or that “there are absolutely undecidable statements.” Since then others -- most notably Lucas and Penrose -- have argued for the stronger conclusion, namely, that the incompleteness theorems imply the first of these two disjuncts -- that "the mind cannot be mechanized". In the first part of the talk I will sharpen the underlying notions. This will enable us to pull the discussion into a setting where definitive results can be proved. We shall see that (thus formalized) Gödel's disjunction is indeed provable. This then leads to the question: "Which disjunct holds?” I will discuss some recent independence results which show that when (thus formalized) one can show that although the disjunction is provable neither disjunct is provable or refutable. Moreover, the result is robust in that it persists when one strengthens the underlying principles of knowledge. I will conclude that the questions of whether "the mind can be mechanized" or whether "there are absolutely undecidable statements" are themselves good candidates for statements that are "absolutely undecidable.”

Volker Halbach: Self-reference, truth, and provability

The Philosophy of Spinoza & Leibniz - Bryan Magee & Anthony Quinton (1987)

William Dunham, A tribute to Euler

The Professor Who Taught People How To Think (1962)

You Know This Song (but the Orchestra Doesn’t) | Jacob Collier & VSO School of Music Orchestra | TED

Can We Test Quantum Gravity? ft. Vlatko Vedral | World Science Festival

Gil Strang's Final 18.06 Linear Algebra Lecture

Why Returning From Mars Is Impossible: Feynman's Warning

Clara Mattei: capitalism is not natural - it’s enforced

Faster-Than-Light Travel Might Not Be Forbidden — What Alcubierre's Warp Drive Actually Requires

The Invention That Saved Science

Yann LeCun: World Models: Enabling the next AI revolution

The Meaning of Ramanujan and His Lost Notebook

🩺 2024 Medical Terminology Made Easy - Part 1

But what is quantum computing? (Grover's Algorithm)

🩸 Phlebotomy Technician Practice Quiz – with Nurse Eunice! 🎯

1. The Geometry of Linear Equations

Richard Feynman: Quantum Mechanical View of Reality 1

Sean Carroll | The Passage of Time & the Meaning of Life

