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Physical Computation: A Mechanistic Account…
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Physical Computation: A Mechanistic Account (edition 2015)

by Gualtiero Piccinini (Author)

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Gualtiero Piccinini articulates and defends a mechanistic account of concrete, or physical, computation. A physical system is a computing system just in case it is a mechanism one of whose functions is to manipulate vehicles based solely on differences between different portions of thevehicles according to a rule defined over the vehicles. The Nature of Computation discusses previous accounts of computation and argues that the mechanistic account is better. Many kinds of computation are explicated, such as digital vs. analog, serial vs. parallel, neural network computation,program-controlled computation, and more. Piccinini argues that computation does not entail representation or information processing although information processing entails computation. Pancomputationalism, according to which every physical system is computational, is rejected. A modest version ofthe physical Church-Turing thesis, according to which any function that is physically computable is computable by Turing machines, is defended.… (more)
Member:AbsentQualia
Title:Physical Computation: A Mechanistic Account
Authors:Gualtiero Piccinini (Author)
Info:Oxford University Press (2015), Edition: 1, 280 pages
Collections:Your library
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Tags:philosophy, computation, philosophy of computation, 21st century

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The Nature of Computation: A Mechanistic Account by Gualtiero Piccinini

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Gualtiero Piccinini articulates and defends a mechanistic account of concrete, or physical, computation. A physical system is a computing system just in case it is a mechanism one of whose functions is to manipulate vehicles based solely on differences between different portions of thevehicles according to a rule defined over the vehicles. The Nature of Computation discusses previous accounts of computation and argues that the mechanistic account is better. Many kinds of computation are explicated, such as digital vs. analog, serial vs. parallel, neural network computation,program-controlled computation, and more. Piccinini argues that computation does not entail representation or information processing although information processing entails computation. Pancomputationalism, according to which every physical system is computational, is rejected. A modest version ofthe physical Church-Turing thesis, according to which any function that is physically computable is computable by Turing machines, is defended.

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