From: Brian Holtz [Brian.Holtz@sun.com] Sent: Thursday, October 18, 2001 8:47 AM To: Brian Holtz Subject: Re: Hawking, Penrose: Our universe, highly unlikely. "Paul Filseth" wrote > The fact remains that you think it's acceptable > to accuse me of dishonesty for saying something that's true, merely > because I drew attention to facts that are important to me instead of > ones that are important to you. My accusation was: > > > if your [original] claim were merely about the theoretical possibility > > > of artificial life in a Turing machine, then it seems disingenuous > > > to instead invoke the simplistic physics of Life You replied that "I think it was a more direct method", and so I said: "Since you just said that it was not the Turing machine method you were thinking of, the "if" clause of my statement should be false, and no charge of disingenuousness stands." So now I'm confused. Perhaps you are retracting your apparent statement that your original claim did not rely merely on the theoretical possibility of artificial life in a Turing Machine. If not, then no charge of disingenuousness stands, and I'm not sure what we're debating. If so, then my explanation of my suspicion remains: "I think somebody has demonstrated that you can build a Turing machine using the gears and whatnot of an erector set. But would you use an erector set as your poster child for an alternative universe that could support evolving patterns? If your claimed support for evolving patterns came from the property of Turing completeness, then I found it odd that you didn't just using abstract Turing machines as your example, but instead chose a Turing machine substrate that just so happens to also support a menagerie of subsystems that people talk about in pseudobiological terms. Hence my suspicion of disingenuousness." Note that I never said your statement was "dishonest"; I only said it "seems disingenuous". Perhaps it simply didn't occur to you that when you chose Life as your example Turing machine substrate for Turing-computable lifelike patterns, people might think you were making a claim about the evolvability of puffers and gliders etc. -- brian@holtz.org http://humanknowledge.net