Abstract
Marco Buzzoni
Gödel, Searle, and the Computational Theory of the (Other) Mind
According to Sergio Galvan, some of the arguments offered by Lucas
and Penrose are somewhat obscure or even logically invalid, but he accepts their
fundamental idea that a human mind does not work as a computational machine.
His main point is that there is a qualitative difference between the principles of
the logic of provability and those of the logic of evidence and belief. To evaluate
this suggestion, I shall first compare it with Searle’s concept of “intentionality”,
and then introduce a distinction between two different senses of intentionality:
a reflexive-transcendental sense and a positive (that is, historical empirical or
formal logical) one. In the first of these senses, the nature of human reason is such
that we have no idea how a real material system – or the corresponding formal
one – could instantiate it. However, although this will turn out to be an important
element of truth in Searle’s and Galvan’s conception, it does not exclude the
opposite truth of Turing’s functionalism: because intentionality, intuition, vision
or insight – taken in their reflexive-transcendental sense – are simply invisible
to the scientific eye, a man and a machine (or a robot) that is and one that is
not endowed with intentionality are de facto indistinguishable from a strictly
scientific point of view. For this reason, we might eventually be entitled, or
even — by the practical precautionary principle – morally obliged, to attribute
minds to machines.