What about laws of physics, or evolution? While true (if technically vague) explanations for actions, they are not true cognitive reasons for actions.
“I don’t want to die,” for example, is obviously both an emotional preference and the result of the natural evolution of the brain. That the brain is an evolved organ isn’t disputed here.
Upvoting everyone. This was a really useful conversation, and I’m pretty sure I was wrong, so I definitely learned something. The evolutionary drives example was much more useful to me than the AI example. Thanks!
(Though I am still of the opinion that the speech itself was still great without the info; Due to being an introduction to the topic, I still don’t expect it to be able to cover everything. )
There are explanations of different kinds that hold simultaneously. An explanation of the wrong kind (for example, evolutionary explanation) that is only similar (because of shared reasons) to the relevant explanation (of the right kind, in this case “goals”, a normative or at least cognitive explanation) can be used to gain correct answers, used as a heuristic (evolutionary psychology has a bit of predictive power about human behavior and even goals). This further simplifies confusing them, so that instead of a rule of thumb, a source of knowledge, an explanation of the wrong kind would try taking a role that doesn’t belong to it, becoming a definition of the thing being sought. For example, “maximizing inclusive fitness” can be believed to be an actual human goal.
Upvoted for the clarification. Thanks!
“I don’t want to die,” for example, is obviously both an emotional preference and the result of the natural evolution of the brain. That the brain is an evolved organ isn’t disputed here.
Upvoting everyone. This was a really useful conversation, and I’m pretty sure I was wrong, so I definitely learned something. The evolutionary drives example was much more useful to me than the AI example. Thanks!
(Though I am still of the opinion that the speech itself was still great without the info; Due to being an introduction to the topic, I still don’t expect it to be able to cover everything. )
There are explanations of different kinds that hold simultaneously. An explanation of the wrong kind (for example, evolutionary explanation) that is only similar (because of shared reasons) to the relevant explanation (of the right kind, in this case “goals”, a normative or at least cognitive explanation) can be used to gain correct answers, used as a heuristic (evolutionary psychology has a bit of predictive power about human behavior and even goals). This further simplifies confusing them, so that instead of a rule of thumb, a source of knowledge, an explanation of the wrong kind would try taking a role that doesn’t belong to it, becoming a definition of the thing being sought. For example, “maximizing inclusive fitness” can be believed to be an actual human goal.