1,722,777 research outputs found
Fred R. Lucas Collection
Photograph of Fred R. Lucas with his Radio & TV Service Truck, Woodward, OK, c. 1957
Fred R. Lucas Collection
Photograph of Fred R. Lucas working in his Radio & TV Repair Shop, Woodward, OK, c. 1957
John R. Lucas against Mechanism
Can the human mind be properly described in mechanical terms? It is in order to demonstrate that it cannot be that in 1959 John R. Lucas presented an anti-mechanist argument by appealing to Gödel’s first incompleteness theorem. He attempted to show that any computational device cannot be an adequate model of the human mind, since, if there is a model of the human mind that is a machine, then there is at least a sentence that the machine cannot prove, while the human mind can. Lucas could not have foreseen the many disputes that this argument would have produced since then and the significant impact that it would have on the studies on the mechanical simulation of the human mind. As a tribute to the ingenuity of Lucas, this volume collects the most relevant papers that have contributed to the lively and stimulating debate arising from his argument
R. Lucas, Quellen und Formen des Sowjetrechts
R. Lucas, Quellen und Formen des Sowjetrechts. In: Revue internationale de droit comparé. Vol. 19 N°4, Octobre-décembre 1967. pp. 1019-1020
J. R. Lucas, The Principles of Politics
Nolet Yves. J. R. Lucas, The Principles of Politics. In: Revue Philosophique de Louvain. Troisième série, tome 65, n°88, 1967. pp. 574-575
R. Lucas, Quellen und Formen des Sowjetrechts
R. Lucas, Quellen und Formen des Sowjetrechts. In: Revue internationale de droit comparé. Vol. 19 N°4, Octobre-décembre 1967. pp. 1019-1020
J. R. Lucas, The Freedom of the Will
Dumoncel Jean-Claude. J. R. Lucas, The Freedom of the Will. In: Revue Philosophique de Louvain. Quatrième série, tome 74, n°21, 1976. pp. 167-170
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