There is no "data" in the computer. There are patterns of charge and magnetic fields that we can interpret as data. Data exists in our minds, where it has context.
No the "data" exists in the interaction between the mind and computer. As well as in the commands that exist within the computer where the context exists as well driving the physical structure of the interactions.
It's been programmed in. There is physical data (the magnetic states) and command structure (code) driving physical interactions, in order to relate the relational data that your mind can understand (which only exists when there is a mind present to form the interelationships).
By that reasoning, the driver is part of the machinery of the car. Seems to me that is straining at gnats and swallowing camels, just to protect an untenable position.
Why isn't the driver part of the machinery of the car when in motion? That is exactly what a car is FOR, incorporation of a mechanical driver.
What is the point of a distinction here between incorporated parts and interchangeable ones? How incorperated to the parts have to become before we call them a part of the system we are talkinga bout?
Is the mechanical energy I am using any less part of my physical body than the physical cellular structure simply because it is transient?
Which atoms are a part of my physical makeup? Just the ones that stick around?
Whether the lights are on or off, or whether the doors are open or closed can also be part of the physical properties of the house. Do you use one bedroom for storage? Does that change the nature of the house?
Yes? Why don't you tell me how large a change I need to make to change the physical properties of my house. Do I need to knock out a wall? Will adding a shelf do? Does throwing a stone in a river change it's course slightly? The real question is wether we care enough to make a linquistic adjustment.
I am saying that the arrangement of molecules changes the physical properties of a substance so pretty much everything is in physical flux.
We experience everything as averages but that doesn’t mean we ever walk into the same river twice.
One mind can think many different, even things, and can even hold contradictory opinions simultaneously. The software is not the hardware. The program controls the machine and (we hope) determines the output, but different programs will deliver different outputs from the same machine.
Grow up in the Bible Belt, and you become a drunk, an adulterer, a serial polygamist, and a deacon in the Baptist Church. Grow up in Saudi Arabia, and you become a suicide bomber. Same machine, different programs!
The software and hardware are intertwined regardless of the complexity of the result. A PC with windows installed will function differently than a computer with linx.
So, a Buick in Antarctica is different in nature than a Buick in DesMoines? Context and position are important, but the machinery is the same, even if the functionality is very different.
What did I just say? Position is a physical property. You are just hung up on the idea of categories and sameness. The two cars seem identical enough to treat in an identical manner so you disregard.
This is a product of your consciousness simplifying things in order to make it's job easier. This is the reason people have a hard time understanding how a system of changing states like a bunch of neurons discharging in various sequences can cause a self aware consciousness.
The computer, combined with the software constitutes a single system. That is so. But the computer without the software is still a computer. Conflate too many ideas under a single label, and your meaning becomes problematic. It is well to stick to rigid definitions when possible.
The computer being a computer is not in question, I am saying that a computer is different when there is software installed, and that the software becomes a part of the computer.
Rigid definitions are for people seeking simplicity. Simplicity is admirable because it is functional. If you want to understand the details of what is happening you have to understand the interconnectedness of physical things.
GS here wants to understand how relational things work and so I am speaking in terms of interrelated physical systems. Where things like interrelatedness, position and state start to matter greatly to the physical makeup of certain things.
So, yes, the conscious system of a human being is woven into the system via it's physical structure in terms of things like the states of neurons. The loss of the conscious system dramatically changes the system we call a human being.
A brain dead human is still a human after all in your scheme, but we all know there is a dramatic difference.