what is the source of the order we see in living organisms? — Wayfarer
I gave you the obvious criticisms of ITT that were made even when Tononi first started going down that route. I remember the rubbishing and even some laughter during the coffee breaks at neuroscience conferences in the mid-1990s. — apokrisis
The reason information theory is useful to humans is that it allows us to atomise the notion of form just as classical mechanics allowed us to atomise the notion of masses and forces - or material and efficient causes — apokrisis
the least useful consisting of a paradoxical ‘relation’ of six-dimensional ‘meaningfulness’, and the most dynamic - and potentially confusing - a combination of ‘object’, ‘event’ and ‘potential’ (a differentiated triadic structure of 3-4-5). — Possibility
IIT is an interesting theoretical approach, but is firmly grounded in Cartesian dualism, and based on an assumption that it’s even possible to qualify consciousness as a consolidated event and then isolate it as a stable evaluation applicable to any interaction. — Possibility
Straw man followed by plain silliness. Yet you seem to want to be taken seriously. — apokrisis
All you are demonstrating is that you don't understand your own sources.
Consciousness as a neural process is as much about differentiation as integration. So any simple claim about "quantities of information" is entirely missing the point.
That is why I prefer architectural approaches like Friston, Grossberg and Freeman (to name a few) that positively emphasise the brain's ability to ignore the world - to limit its "information". They get into what is going on at a deeper conceptual level.
Tononi isn't wrong. He just offers the shallow end of the pool story. ITT builds in the faulty psychology of Cartesian representationalism. And that is the bit you have picked up on and presented here. — apokrisis
↪Pop
I think we'll just have to put up with being bombarded by weird opinions and little curiosity.
Anyway, next week:. the holographic principle for dummies. :cool: — frank
That particular equivalence applies at the Planck scale. So it has nothing to do with the equivalence scale that actually matters for life and mind. — apokrisis
↪Pop The Carl Popper method of negating an argument is dependent on how you define information and your definition is clearly untestable. Your perception of (Matter-Information) is a hallucination of your mind. — Mark Nyquist
So (Matter-Information)? That seems like a new kind of dualism. Are brains even required?
This is better:
Matter--->Brain(Information; the perception of matter). — Mark Nyquist
Very familiar. — apokrisis
He is using the folk confusions over both quantum theory and information theory to make a simple-minded monist claim where information states = conscious states ... because "information integration", or "information parallelism", or whatever monist hand-waving confusion seems to serve the purpose. — apokrisis
And I also agree Pop is doing the opposite of conflating everything that ought to be kept separate. He is using the folk confusions over both quantum theory and information theory to make a simple-minded monist claim where information states = conscious states ... because "information integration", or "information parallelism", or whatever monist hand-waving confusion seems to serve the purpose. — apokrisis
It's not a vague claim about 'everything being information'. — Wayfarer
In that article, the application to ‘information’ is mainly in respect of using entanglement to provide secure communications a.k.a. ‘quantum cryptography’. Nowhere does it say that information is a constituent of matter, unless I missed it. — Wayfarer
But he wasn’t a philosopher. — Wayfarer
And why does every 'thing' need to irreducibly contain information? — Mark Nyquist
But the question arises, what is the faculty that is performing that? There seems to be an ordering principle at work. And I don't know if that faculty can be understood in terms of 'information' or whether it exists on another level altogether. — Wayfarer
But it's still a leap from there to the claim that 'everything is information' in a metaphysical sense, as if in itself this idea comprises a grand philosophical synthesis. It's part of the picture, but not the whole picture. — Wayfarer
Otherwise, saying 'everything is information' means very little in my opinion. Something which explains everything, explains nothing, because it's too general to be meaningful. And 'everything is information' fails for that reason. — Wayfarer
At least matter or matter-energy can be defined within a range by physics. The term 'information' is polysemic, meaning it has many different definitions in different contexts. So saying that 'everything is information' is not a meaningful statement, in my view. — Wayfarer
One is that attention creates a grand central station where integration takes place. — frank
What are your thoughts, queries, arguments, definitions, and insights? It would be great to have a general understanding of information on this forum. — Pop
And understood would imply it fits already established informational structure.
— Pop
That's in the previous post. :up: — frank
information is data plus meaning — frank
And if objects literally process information, then we have a bunch of intelligence all around us. — Manuel
In a moment of consciousness All of one’s historical information ( biological and social ), bodily sensation, and environmental information is integrated to a point,
— Pop
What does that mean? — Banno
1.The opening paragraph is at best dubious, perhaps nonsense. — Banno
2. The posited definitions are ambiguous — Banno
3. Much of the discussion that follows is unverifiable, metaphysical meandering. — Banno
So does that mean information not personally confirmed are but clues? Lies? Possibilities? Relative? — Outlander
Complexity cannot 'start'.
That is magical thinking, a fantasy. illogical. — hope
But you chose the quote, so presumably you think it has some merit. What I am pointing to it the capacity for this thread to be nonsense disguised as physics. — Banno
Complexity is eternal, and eternally changing. — hope
Information can be thought of as the resolution of uncertainty; it answers the question of "What an entity is" and thus defines both its essence and the nature of its characteristics.
— Pop
That is more theology than physics. — Banno
Pop To me it's whatever informs the spin of entangled particle when another is observed. — Cheshire
If function follows form, there is a causality at play.
— Pop
Neither mind nor brain follow each other. They happen at the same time. — hope
The simplest is what we call data. The origin of data is information — Cheshire
Notice the similarity between information and god?
Are you are inventing a new theology?
seconds ago — Banno
When you enter the room and confirm whether said bottle is green, blue, or even existent for that matter, does that change? Why? — Outlander