Hnefi
Regular Member
Imagine that the system wants to achieve goal X and devises a strategy that will achieve X on every single possible input. This can be trivial (return 3), or very complex (earn a million dollars). Arguably, the input conditions the reaction of the system, but ultimately, the result is that X will be achieved and you can't trace that particular result back to the input because it happens no matter what the input is. In other words, you can imagine non-trivial systems that react differently on different inputs yet always achieve a precise objective. Albeit, ultimately, the means of achieving it may be traced back to the input, the fact that the objective is achieved can only be traced back to the system.True. But just because a process is intractable does not mean that it is indeterministic or that it has free will. The system you describe above is deterministic, because its actions are completely causal (assuming there is no random noise). The output of the system - that is, the actions taken - will depend directly on the input.
Basically, what you describe is an arbitrarily complex control system, which you will find in most mechanical systems today. The system constitutes a function f and for any series of inputs, f will always produce the same series of outputs. In other words, given a known input, the actions of the system are predetermined.
But the output isn't "target destroyed", the output is whatever actions you perform to destroy the target, and those actions are directly dependent on the input. To destroy the target is the goal. Goals and outputs are different things.To give you a semi-concrete example, imagine that you have to shoot a target. You have visual input and that input will tell you where to shoot. Nonetheless, when the target is hit, the ultimate cause isn't your visual input because had the target been elsewhere, you would have shot somewhere else, but the target would still have been destroyed. The result "target destroyed" does not depend on the input. You didn't choose where to shoot but you chose to shoot it.
It is also not certain that the target would be destroyed. The input you receive might not be sufficient to plan the necessary chain of actions to achieve your goal. This, too, is directly dependent on the input.
(I agree with all non-quoted parts of your post.)
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