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Brian Cantwell Smith - On the Origin of Objects (Bradford Books)

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On the Origin of Objects is the culmination of Brian Cantwell Smiths decade-long investigation into the philosophical and metaphysical foundations of computation, artificial intelligence, and cognitive science. Based on a sustained critique of the formal tradition that underlies the reigning views, he presents an argument for an embedded, participatory, irreductionist, metaphysical alternative. Smith seeks nothing less than to revise our understanding not only of the machines we build but also of the world with which they interact. Smiths ambitious project begins as a search for a comprehensive theory of computation, able to do empirical justice to practice and conceptual justice to the computational theory of mind. A rigorous commitment to these two criteria ultimately leads him to recommend a radical overhaul of our traditional conception of metaphysics. Everything that exists - objects, properties, life, practice - lies Smith claims in the middle distance, an intermediate realm of partial engagement with and partial separation from, the enveloping world. Patterns of separation and engagement are taken to underlie a single notion unifying representation and ontology: that of subjects registration of the world around them. Along the way, Smith offers many fascinating ideas: the distinction between particularity and individuality, the methodological notion of an inscription error, an argument that there are no individualswithin physics, various deconstructions of the type-instance distinction, an analysis of formality as overly disconnected (discreteness run amok), a conception of the boundaries of objects as properties of unruly interactions between objects and subjects, an argument for the theoretical centrality of reference preservation, and a theatrical, acrobatic metaphor for the contortions involved in the preservation of reference and resultant stabilization of objects. Sidebars and diagrams throughout the book help clarify and guide Smiths highly original and compelling argument. A Bradford Book

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On the Origin of Objects Brian Cantwell Smith A Bradford Book The MIT - photo 1
On the Origin of Objects
Brian Cantwell Smith
A Bradford Book
The MIT Press
Cambridge, Massachusetts
London, England

title:On the Origin of Objects
author:Smith, Brian Cantwell.
publisher:MIT Press
isbn10 | asin:0262193639
print isbn13:9780262193634
ebook isbn13:9780585038193
language:English
subjectMetaphysics, Object (Philosophy)
publication date:1996
lcc:BD111.S573 1996eb
ddc:111
subject:Metaphysics, Object (Philosophy)
Copyright 1996 Brian Cantwell Smith
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be stored, reproduced, or distributed in any form, by optical, electronic, mechanical, or other means (including photocopying, recording, information storage or retrieval, network dissemination, etc.), nor may the format, design, or layout be duplicated or imitated, in whole or in part, without permission in writing from the author.
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Smith, Brian Cantwell.
On the origin of objects / Brian Cantwell Smith.
p. cm.
Includes bibliographical references.
ISBN 0-262-19363-9 (hc: alk. paper)
1. Metaphysics. 2. Object (Philosophy). I. Title.
BDIII.S573 1996
III dc20Picture 2Picture 3Picture 4Picture 595-37637
Picture 6Picture 7Picture 8Picture 9Picture 10CIP
On the Origin of Objects
CONTENTS
Preface
vii
Introduction
3
Part I. Analysis
1 Computation
27
2 Irreduction
77
3 Realism
85
4 Particularity
117
5 physics
137
Part II Construction
6 Flex & slop
191
7 Registration I
213
8 Registration II
243
9 Middle distance
277
10 Transition
315
11 Metaphysics
317
12 Conclusion
345
Indexes
Sections
379
Figures
383
Sidebars
385
Topics
387
Names
407
References
411
Page vii
PREFACE
Picture 11
It is difficult to find in life any event which so effectually condenses intense nervous sensation into the shortest possible space of time as does the work of shooting or running an immense rapid. There is no toil, no heart breaking labour about it, but as much coolness, dexterity, and skill as [a person] can throw into the work of hand, eye, and head; knowledge of when to strike and how to do it; knowledge of water and rock, and of the one hundred combinations which rock and water can assumefor these two things, rock and water, taken in the abstract, fail as completely to convey any idea of their fierce embracings in the throes of a rapid as the fire burning quietly in a drawing-room fireplace fails to convey the idea of a house wrapped and sheeted inflames.
Sir William Francis Butler (1982)
A few years ago, at a workshop on the perception of objects, I raised a question about one of the philosophers' ontological assumptions, which seemed to me altogether too neat. I was concerned about basic issues of object identityabout what makes a newspaper into a single entity as opposed to a large number of separate pieces of paper, what distinguishes the headache that I had this morning from the one I had last night, what it is for Microsoft Word on PCs to be "the same program" as Microsoft Word on the Macintosh. I was particularly troubled by how ready most of the other workshop participants were to base their perceptual theories on the presumption that such ontological questions had clear, determinate answers.
Over lunch, several people pushed the worry aside, as if it were a matter of internal theoretical hygiene. "Don't worry," someone assured me; "most philosophers would insist on precise individuation criteria." Sure enough, most doI knew that. My question was whywhether such presumptions were warranted. And I had a special reason for asking. Having spent more than twenty-five years working in the trenches of practicing computer science, in a long-term effort to develop an empirically re-
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