Litcius/Paper detail

Implementation as Resemblance

André Curtis-Trudel

2021Philosophy of Science21 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

This article advertises a new account of computational implementation. According to the resemblance account, implementation is a matter of resembling a computational architecture. The resemblance account departs from previous theories by denying that computational architectures are exhausted by their formal, mathematical features. Instead, they are taken to be permeated with causality, spatiotemporality, and other nonmathematical features. I argue that this approach comports well with computer scientific practice and offers a novel response to so-called triviality arguments.

Topics & Concepts

TrivialityCausality (physics)Computer scienceEpistemologyFormal descriptionArchitecturePhilosophy of scienceComputational modelMathematical practiceTheoretical computer scienceProgramming languageCognitive scienceMathematical economicsPhilosophyArtificial intelligenceMathematicsPure mathematicsPhysicsHistoryPsychologyArchaeologyQuantum mechanicsComputability, Logic, AI AlgorithmsPhilosophy and History of ScienceScientific Computing and Data Management