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From: mlevin@jade.tufts.edu
Subject: how many distinct thoughts can a person have?
Message-ID: <1991Jun19.033316.18773@athena.mit.edu>
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Date: Wed, 19 Jun 91 03:33:16 GMT
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   I was just reading Z. Pylyshin's "Computation and Cognition", and
at one point, he states something like: "the number of distinct human
thoughts is uncountable." Does anyone have any arguments for or
against the idea that the number of possible distinct human thoughts
(or mental states) is uncountably infinite? Note I do not mean
"astronomicallly large" - I mean infinite (and perhaps uncountably so)
in the strict mathematical sense. It seems plausible to me; does
anyone have a good argument either way?

Mike Levin
