I am not an atheist, but I don't really believe in a God. It's a lot more vague than that — Wayfarer
But, in today's world, if you express reservations about the scientific consensus, then you are usually categorised as being somehow fundamentalist. A — Wayfarer
the more I probe science with the idea of god force, the more I see how weak science's position on insisting that there is none really is. I want to see some solid ideas from the science community to rule out the idea of a god. I want them to fight back on intelligent design with their life from the soup arguments, but their gun is empty. — MikeL
I don't think there's any information lost in viewing the world this way — TheMadFool
I am still trying to understand whether your question is related to the philosophical analysis of conceptual, epistemic, maybe even the methodological basis of metascientific inquiry using Pierce' system or even structuralism. I don't see you mentioning him, which makes me doubt you even understand how semiotics could be applied to scientific analysis. Accessibility to scientific literature has indeed enabled a more broader reach by simplifying the exchange of knowledge through signs.You are right that my use of the term semiotics is based on the idea that complex molecules etc can be represented simply by describing function. — MikeL
When we are faced with such enormity of information we can no longer hold tenable the assertion that we truly understand the system we are investigating. Outside of our local understanding, when asked why a system works a certain way we enter into infinite regress or egress depending on if you are a top down or bottom up kind of thinker. Ultimately there is no answer to the why question. There is no full understanding that can be derived. — MikeL
Yes, because it cuts down on the information load.The enormity of information is the very reason why we have symbolic representations — TimeLine
Yes, to understand something at the local level.it is our attempt to cognise something that cannot be seen otherwise. — TimeLine
In order to understand our local layer we make assumptions about the nature of the objects in it. It is a planet would be an assumption. From a cosmological perspective we see a Planet - this is a semiotic term. It sums up a whole bunch of information into one discreet package.It does not 'blind us to the bigger picture' — TimeLine
In order to understand our local layer we make assumptions about the nature of the objects in it. It is a planet would be an assumption. — MikeL
From a cosmological perspective we see a Planet - this is a semiotic term. It sums up a whole bunch of information into one discreet package. — MikeL
A planetologist may describe it in terms of their semiotics. It is a gas giant 2 billion miles in diameter with an iron core and sulphur-dioxide atmosphere, a rotational period of 2.3 days, a surface pressure of 10 million KPa and a core pressure of 40 billion kPa, a surface temperature of 600Kelvin and a core temperature of 6000 kelvin.
Between the two there has been information loss. — MikeL
The cosmologist cannot claim to fully understand the cosmos without fully understanding the planets in it. They can only claim to understand their part of it - the local level. — MikeL
Imagine trying to explain neuronal signalling by explaining the energy state changes in atoms – and yet it could be done. — MikeL
What I don't grasp in your outlook is, why you think 'explaining the energy state changes in atoms' would somehow not be done through signs. We exchange ideas in language, which is signs. Our maths is signs. — mcdoodle
W: what about atomic decay amounts to information?
A: Christ almighty. It rewrites the state of the Universe. Another bit of history has accumulated and so points all possibility toward a more constrained future.
Stop thinking about this as humans feeling mentally informed. And don't even start thinking about it computationally as the reading and writing of memory states.
Semiotics is about information as the bleeding differences that make a bleeding difference in the real world, even the lifeless real world. A bit has physicalist meaning as a sign of things to come.
For semiotics, there is no meaning 'beyond' the signs; no meaning 'out there' or 'in here' in some transcendent sense. So, it is reductionist, just as surely as materialism or physicalism is. — Janus
If you could support that with a citation or example, it would be useful. I would say there are some who appeal to semiotics who would say that, but others who would not. I don't see it as being particularly associated with semiotics. — Wayfarer
I don't think that, and I'm not saying that mcdoodle.What I don't grasp in your outlook is, why you think 'explaining the energy state changes in atoms' would somehow not be done through signs. — mcdoodle
I have stated that this happens and have not suggested they should not understand their local layer.Any working scientist must heighten the local detail that matters as much as they can, simplify the rest and hold certain things to be not involved with their locality - ceteris paribus - then do their thing. — mcdoodle
This is my contention, yes.Scientists at different 'levels' will regard the 'detail' they are interested in in a different way. — mcdoodle
This is the critical part. There is no place to start. All is semiotic.I presume we start from this basis. — mcdoodle
if everything is information, then 'information' has no meaning. — Wayfarer
Can you give an example of a statement by any semiotician that shows that the notion of transcendent meaning is incorporated in their system? — Janus
What is 'transcendent' anyway? Might be worth having a go at trying to define it. Perhaps - a feature or attribute of experience, which can't be explained on the basis of anything in experience. — Wayfarer
I still think this is mistaken - if everything is information, then 'information' has no meaning. — Wayfarer
We can model reality itself in terms of "marks" or countable degrees of freedom. — apokrisis
Physics was once classically atomist - reductionist in presuming reality was just composed of definite lumps of matter. We learnt better. So now we use the notion of information to describe reality in terms of its formal limits. The "ultimate stuff" becomes the "outputs" that regulate being - the emergent constraints - rather than the "inputs" that supposedly compose it. — apokrisis
If I scratch a rock with my name, the mark is likely to still be there in 10,000 years. So that endurance puts the mark at the limit of normal physics. It is an exceptional thing. — apokrisis
Matter as described by physics and chemistry has no intrinsic function or semantics. By contrast, biosemiotics recognizes that life begins with function and semantics.
The origin of life question is: How did this separation, this epistemic cut, originate? As Hoffmeyer (2000) has pointed out, the apparently sharp epistemic cut between these categories makes it difficult to imagine how life began and how these two categories evolved at higher levels. The epistemic cut appears to be a conceptual as well as a topological discontinuity. It is difficult to imagine a gradual cut. The problem arises acutely with the genetic code. A partial code does not work, and a simple code that works as it evolves is hard to imagine. In fact, this is a universal problem in evolution and even in creative thought. How does a complex functioning set of constraints originate when no subset of the constraints appears to maintain the function? How does a reversible dynamics gradually become an irreversible thermodynamics? How does a paradigm shift from classical determinism to quantum indeterminism occur gradually? At least in the case of thought we can trace some of the history, but in the origin of life we have no adequate history. Even in the case of creative thought, so much goes on in the subconscious mind that the historical trace has large gaps.
I will state at the outset that I have not solved this problem.
I don't understand what 'a countable degree of freedom' is. — Wayfarer
A degree of freedom of a physical system is an independent parameter that is necessary to characterize the state of a physical system. In general, a degree of freedom may be any useful property that is not dependent on other variables.
The location of a particle in three-dimensional space requires three position coordinates. Similarly, the direction and speed at which a particle moves can be described in terms of three velocity components, each in reference to the three dimensions of space. If the time evolution of the system is deterministic, where the state at one instant uniquely determines its past and future position and velocity as a function of time, such a system has six degrees of freedom.[citation needed] If the motion of the particle is constrained to a lower number of dimensions, for example, the particle must move along a wire or on a fixed surface, then the system has fewer than six degrees of freedom. On the other hand, a system with an extended object that can rotate or vibrate can have more than six degrees of freedom.
In classical mechanics, the state of a point particle at any given time is often described with position and velocity coordinates in the Lagrangian formalism, or with position and momentum coordinates in the Hamiltonian formalism.
In statistical mechanics, a degree of freedom is a single scalar number describing the microstate of a system.[1] The specification of all microstates of a system is a point in the system's phase space.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Degrees_of_freedom_(physics_and_chemistry)
Furthermore - and without wishing to sound trite - who is counting? — Wayfarer
Does 'physics' really think that? — Wayfarer
The Physics and Metaphysics of Biosemiotics, by Pattee, seems to acknowledge that there is a fundamental difference between living and non-living matter: — Wayfarer
Whereas, you seem to be saying that there is no such 'topological discontinuity' at all? Am I understanding you right? — Wayfarer
"Counting" without anyone who counts, "knowing" without anyone who knows. That's the problem I have with 'pansemiosis'. — Wayfarer
I haven't read the book but that's seems like a no brainer. I find it hard to see how it is an argument rather than an observation. — MikeL
The only problem is it doesn't explain the origin of life at all. It only explains the propagation of life from life. — MikeL
So I don't consider any of these to be huge inroads at all into explaining abiogenesis. — MikeL
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