> Symbols, by definition, only represent a thing. They are not the same as the thing
First of all, the point isn't about the map becoming the territory, but about whether LLMs can form a map that's similar to the map in our brains.
But to your philosophical point, assuming there are only a finite number of things and places in the universe - or at least the part of which we care about - why wouldn't they be representable with a finite set of symbols?
What you're rejecting is the Church-Turing thesis [1] (essentially, that all mechanical processes, including that of nature, can be simulated with symbolic computation, although there are weaker and stronger variants). It's okay to reject it, but you should know that not many people do (even some non-orthodox thoughts by Penrose about the brain not being simulatable by an ordinary digital computer still accept that some physical machine - the brain - is able to represent what we're interested in).
> If we accept the incompleteness theorem
There is no if there. It's a theorem. But it's completely irrelevant. It means that there are mathematical propositions that can't be proven or disproven by some system of logic, i.e. by some mechanical means. But if something is in the universe, then it's already been proven by some mechanical process: the mechanics of nature. That means that if some finite set of symbols could represent the laws of nature, then anything in nature can be proven in that logical system. Which brings us back to the first point: the only way the mechanics of nature cannot be represented by symbols is if they are somehow infinite, i.e. they don't follow some finite set of laws. In other words - there is no physics. Now, that may be true, but if that's the case, then AI is the least of our worries.
Of course, if physics does exist - i.e. the universe is governed by a finite set of laws - that doesn't mean that we can predict the future, as that would entail both measuring things precisely and simulating them faster than their operation in nature, and both of these things are... difficult.
> Of course, if physics does exist - i.e. the universe is governed by a finite set of laws
Wouldn't physics still "exist" even if there were an infinite set of laws?
> course, if physics does exist - i.e. the universe is governed by a finite set of laws
That statement is problematic. It implies a metaphysical set of laws that make physical stuff relate a certain way.
The Humean way of looking at physics is that we notice relationships and model those with various symbols. They symbols form incomplete models because we can't get to the bottom of why the relationships exist.
> that doesn't mean that we can predict the future, as that would entail both measuring things precisely and simulating them faster than their operation in nature, and both of these things are... difficult.
The indeterminism of Quantum Mechanics limits how how precise measure can be and how predictable the future is.
> First of all, the point isn't about the map becoming the territory, but about whether LLMs can form a map that's similar to the map in our brains.
It should be capable of something similar (fsvo similar), but the largest difference is that humans have to be power-efficient and LLMs do not.
That is, people don't actually have world models, because modeling something is a waste of time and energy insofar as it's not needed for anything. People are capable of taking out the trash without knowing what's in the garbage bag.