3rd axiom is a logical not an empirical truth
That syntax is not sufficient for semantics is a logical truth, not an empirical question. To see this, notice that its converse raises inconsistencies (described in the detailed text).
Imagine that syntax is sufficient for semantics, and that there is some Chinese thinking going on in the Chinese room as the man shuffles symbols. What makes the syntactical manipulations give off a specifically Chinese semantics? Different people could interpret the symbols so they would give off other semantics. The man shuffling the symbols could see them as a chess game, a second person looking through the window could see them as stock market predictions, and so on.



John Searle, 1990b
Immediately related elementsHow this works
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Artificial Intelligence »Artificial Intelligence
Can computers think? [1] »Can computers think? [1]
Yes: physical symbol systems can think [3] »Yes: physical symbol systems can think [3]
The Chinese Room Argument [4] »The Chinese Room Argument [4]
The Syntax-Semantics Barrier »The Syntax-Semantics Barrier
Searle's 3rd axiom requires scientific research  »Searle's 3rd axiom requires scientific research
3rd axiom is a logical not an empirical truth
John Searle »John Searle
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