< ari> Why do computer scientists have such a low opinion of philosophers?
<@spb> depends which sort of computer scientist and which sort of philosopher
< ari> The kind of computer scientist that tends to have a low opinion of the kind of philosopher that the kind of computer scientist that tends to have a low opinion of this kind of philosopher tends to have a low opinion of.
<@spb> depends which sort of computer scientist and which sort of philosopher
< ari> The kind of computer scientist that tends to have a low opinion of the kind of philosopher that the kind of computer scientist that tends to have a low opinion of this kind of philosopher tends to have a low opinion of.
I kind of got carried away writing this sentence... until, about 3/4 way through, I suddenly realised I wasn't sure what semantic level I was on. Then I spent a couple of minutes trying to figure that out, gave up, and just finished the sentence in a way that seemed syntactically correct and sounded right. I know little about natural language analysis, could someone find a more understandable representation for this sentence or its meaning?
FWIW, I'm not quite sure what it actually means. I suspect, however, that if you were to actually try to evaluate the set of philosophers and computer scientists defined here the computation would diverge... unless you give it a seed value: If you start with a set of computer scientists containing Asher and an empty set of philosophers, recursively add philosophers disliked by any of the computer scientists in our set and computer scientists that dislike any of the philosophers in our set, you can reach a defined fixed point. Chances are that this point will contain a lot of computer scientists.
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