The Difficulties in Symbol Grounding Problem and the Direction for Solving It
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Published:2022-09-27
Issue:5
Volume:7
Page:108
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ISSN:2409-9287
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Container-title:Philosophies
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language:en
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Short-container-title:Philosophies
Author:
Li JianhuiORCID,
Mao Haohao
Abstract
The symbol grounding problem (SGP) proposed by Stevan Harnad in 1990, originates from Searle’s “Chinese Room Argument” and refers to the problem of how a pure symbolic system acquires its meaning. While many solutions to this problem have been proposed, all of them have encountered inconsistencies to different extents. A recent approach for resolving the problem is to divide the SGP into hard and easy problems echoing the distinction between hard and easy problems for resolving the enigma of consciousness. This however turns out not to be an ideal strategy: Everything related to consciousness that cannot be well-explained by present theories can be categorized as a hard problem which as a consequence would doom the SGP to irresolvability. We therefore argue that the SGP can be regarded as a general problem of how an AI system can have intentionality, and develop a theoretical direction for its solution.
Funder
Guangdong Special Fund for Main Disciplines of General University
Subject
History and Philosophy of Science,Philosophy
Reference37 articles.
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4. The symbol grounding problem
5. Psychosemantics: The Problem of Meaning in the Philosophy of Mind;Fodor,1987
Cited by
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