This needs its own thread:
1) You may be the ONLY person on planet earth that says a calculator doesn't work with numbers.
What, pray tell, is a calculator working with and "doing" again? It's adding/subtracting/dividing/multiplying ...?
You want to say that the LED that displays "8, 7, 9" is fundamentally DIFFERENT from the bits that drive the pixels to display those things? Under what authority of your machine/bit QED's early on are you magic-wanding such capacity?
2) There are NO "symbols" in the bit-processing machine, like there are no axioms. There are 1D bits that have nothing to do with each other. "Alpha-numeric" to a machine/brain = numeric only. I was using "axioms" to bracket "symbols" in. Symbols as in A, B, C are nothing more than user-defined 1D bit sequences that have NO basis to the machine outside of nondescript conglomerations of bits vs. other nondescript conglomerations of bits.
In any case, with respect to #1, I MAY be onboard with calling a "number" a "symbological representation of a unique set of bits"... though to say that in base 2, I can't also call 110111010 "442" is a little... <insert word for vexing>. And it ain't certainly anything your brain or Siri can do per #2. Its "utterance" of 442 or display of such on a screen is NOT the same thing, because there is no conceptual emulsification of any of the bits into any abstraction.
1) You may be the ONLY person on planet earth that says a calculator doesn't work with numbers.
You want to say that the LED that displays "8, 7, 9" is fundamentally DIFFERENT from the bits that drive the pixels to display those things? Under what authority of your machine/bit QED's early on are you magic-wanding such capacity?
2) There are NO "symbols" in the bit-processing machine, like there are no axioms. There are 1D bits that have nothing to do with each other. "Alpha-numeric" to a machine/brain = numeric only. I was using "axioms" to bracket "symbols" in. Symbols as in A, B, C are nothing more than user-defined 1D bit sequences that have NO basis to the machine outside of nondescript conglomerations of bits vs. other nondescript conglomerations of bits.
In any case, with respect to #1, I MAY be onboard with calling a "number" a "symbological representation of a unique set of bits"... though to say that in base 2, I can't also call 110111010 "442" is a little... <insert word for vexing>. And it ain't certainly anything your brain or Siri can do per #2. Its "utterance" of 442 or display of such on a screen is NOT the same thing, because there is no conceptual emulsification of any of the bits into any abstraction.
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